imprimis.hillsdale.eduImprimis - A Publication of Hillsdale College
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Profile
imprimis.hillsdale.edu
Maindomain:hillsdale.edu
Title:Imprimis - A Publication of Hillsdale College
Description:While the hallowed doctrine of stare decisis—the rule that judges are bound to respect precedent—certainly applies to the lower courts, Supreme Court justices owe fidelity to the Constitution alone, and if their predecessors have construed it erroneously, today’s justices must say so and overturn their decisions.
Discover imprimis.hillsdale.edu website stats, rating, details and status online.Use our online tools to find owner and admin contact info. Find out where is server located.Read and write reviews or vote to improve it ranking. Check alliedvsaxis duplicates with related css, domain relations, most used words, social networks references. Go to regular site
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Information
Website / Domain: |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu |
HomePage size: | 117.887 KB |
Page Load Time: | 0.524131 Seconds |
Website IP Address: |
104.18.22.165 |
Isp Server: |
CloudFlare Inc. |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Ip Information
Ip Country: |
United States |
City Name: |
Phoenix |
Latitude: |
33.448379516602 |
Longitude: |
-112.07404327393 |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Keywords accounting
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Httpheader
Date: Sat, 26 Sep 2020 13:06:33 GMT |
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 |
Transfer-Encoding: chunked |
Connection: keep-alive |
Vary: Accept-Encoding, Accept-Encoding, Cookie |
Cache-Control: max-age=3, must-revalidate |
X-LW-Cache: STALE |
X-Cacheable: YES |
X-Cache: HIT |
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * |
CF-Cache-Status: EXPIRED |
cf-request-id: 056c1ec99e00001c85d03ee200000001 |
Expect-CT: max-age=604800, report-uri="https://report-uri.cloudflare.com/cdn-cgi/beacon/expect-ct" |
Server: cloudflare |
CF-RAY: 5d8d33ef6d6e1c85-SJC |
Content-Encoding: gzip |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Meta Info
content="en_US" property="og:locale"/ |
content="website" property="og:type"/ |
content="Imprimis" property="og:title"/ |
content="A Publication of Hillsdale College" property="og:description"/ |
content="https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu" property="og:url"/ |
content="Imprimis" property="og:site_name"/ |
content="https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Imprimis_Share.png" property="og:image"/ |
content="https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Imprimis_Share.png" property="og:image:secure_url"/ |
content="summary_large_image" name="twitter:card"/ |
content="hcimprimis" name="twitter:site"/ |
content="Imprimis" name="twitter:domain"/ |
content="While the hallowed doctrine of stare decisis—the rule that judges are bound to respect precedent—certainly applies to the lower courts, Supreme Court justices owe fidelity to the Constitution alone, and if their predecessors have construed it erroneously, today’s justices must say so and overturn their decisions." name="description"/ |
content="noodp" name="robots"/ |
content="Imprimis Magazine | Hillsdale College" property="og:title"/ |
content="Imprimis is the free monthly speech digest of Hillsdale College and is dedicated to educating citizens and promoting civil and religious liberty by covering cultural, economic, political, and educational issues." property="og:description"/ |
content="https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/" property="og:url"/ |
content="While the hallowed doctrine of stare decisis—the rule that judges are bound to respect precedent—certainly applies to the lower courts, Supreme Court justices owe fidelity to the Constitution alone, and if their predecessors have construed it erroneously, today’s justices must say so and overturn their decisions." name="twitter:description"/ |
content="Imprimis - A Publication of Hillsdale College" name="twitter:title"/ |
content="@hcimprimis" name="twitter:site"/ |
content="https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Imprimis_Share.png" name="twitter:image"/ |
content="EA340D256FDEFB4041EDBC3C6F1BF87B" name="msvalidate.01"/ |
content="WordPress 5.5.1" name="generator"/ |
content="611784B1B7ED79DEE42D9EC9436CFDD0" name="msvalidate.01"/ |
charset="utf-8"/ |
content="width=device-width" name="viewport"/ |
content="341881063685" property="fb:pages"/ |
104.18.22.165 Domains
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Similar Website
Domain |
WebSite Title |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu | Imprimis - A Publication of Hillsdale College |
imprimisarchives.hillsdale.edu | Imprimis - A monthly digest on liberty and the defense of America's founding principles |
publications.ieema.org | IEEMA Publication |
pubs.hawthornpublications.com | Publication Deactivated |
publishr.tumblr.com | Publishr - A New Age In Publication |
editions.mydigitalpublication.com | Publication Issues WWWMYDIGITALPUBLICATIONCOM |
paper.kruger.com | Publication Papers - Kruger Inc. |
online.fliphtml5.com | Online Digital Publication |
bookganga.com | BookGanga - Creation | Publication | Distribution |
catalogs.speedwaymotors.com | Publication Issues: CATALOGS.SPEEDWAYMOTORS.COM |
digital.propertiesmag.com | Publication Issues: DIGITAL.PROPERTIESMAG.COM |
digital.modernluxury.com | Publication Issues: DIGITAL.MODERNLUXURY.COM |
digitalcatalog.remke.com | Publication Issues: DIGITALCATALOG.REMKE.COM |
digitalissue.houstonpress.com | Publication Issues: DIGITALISSUE.HOUSTONPRESS.COM |
digital.miinews.com | Publication Issues: DIGITAL.MIINEWS.COM |
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Traffic Sources Chart
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Alexa Rank History Chart
imprimis.hillsdale.edu Html To Plain Text
Skip to main content Support Imprimis -- American Sports Are Letting Down America America is a shining example of sports’ transformative power. The games we play, the games at the center of our social behavior, combine with our founding principles to enhance the American experience. America’s enemies know this, which is why the culture war has moved to our arenas and stadiums. July/August 2020 • Volume 49, Number 7/8 • Jason Whitlock • Culture , Journalism , Race Relations -- Four Months of Unprecedented Government Malfeasance The coronavirus lockdowns demonstrated our leaders’ ignorance of economic interdependence. After the riots, that ignorance has been shown to run far deeper. It is an ignorance about government’s most fundamental obligation: to safeguard life, liberty, and property. It is an ignorance about human nature and human striving. May/June 2020 • Volume 49, Number 5/6 • Heather Mac Donald • Government , Healthcare , Journalism , Race Relations -- Thoughts on the Current Crisis Going forward, our best leaders will eschew political gamesmanship and work to control our borders, fix our public health agencies, and end our dependence on China and other foreign countries for goods that are essential to our national health and security. We must prepare ourselves to face the next pandemic without surrendering our way of life. March/April 2020 • Volume 49, Number 3/4 • Larry P. Arnn • Economics , Foreign Policy , Government , Healthcare -- The Roots of Our Partisan Divide More and more areas of American life have been withdrawn from voters’ democratic control and delivered up to the bureaucratic and judicial emergency mechanisms of civil rights law. Civil rights law has become a second constitution, with powers that can be used to override the Constitution of 1787. February 2020 • Volume 49, Number 2 • Christopher Caldwell • Government , History , Immigration , Law , Race Relations -- The Urgent Need for a United States Space Force The reason for a space force is simple: space is the strategic high ground from which all future wars will be fought. If we do not master space, our nation will become indefensible. January 2020 • Volume 49, Number 1 • Steven L. Kwast • Economics , Foreign Policy , National Defense -- Four Pillars: Educating for America Colleges today are increasingly collections of hostile identity groups, each clamoring against the crimes of the other. Students are not invited to step outside themselves, to step outside their own time, and to look at things as they have been understood by the best over time. If they did that, they would then learn and grow not by invention but by discovery. December 2019 • Volume 48, Number 12 • Larry P. Arnn • Education , Government , Religion -- “Faith and reason are mutually reinforcing” By constructing this Chapel, the College upholds the importance of its Christian roots, even as it respects the rights of each person to worship God according to his own conscience. Our country was founded on the view that a correct understanding of the nature of God and the human person is critical to preserving liberty. November 2019 • Volume 48, Number 11 • Clarence Thomas • Education , Religion -- “American citizenship is eroding” Ancient authors from Plato to Tacitus have suggested that affluence combined with leisure creates a laxity that leads to the kind of societal and institutional disintegration we are currently seeing. Another major ingredient is the failure of our education system to offer disinterested instruction, following from the post-1960s takeover by the Left of our colleges and universities. November 2019 • Volume 48, Number 11 • Victor Davis Hanson • Government , Immigration -- Why and How the U.S. Should Stop Financing China’s Bad Actors A company’s stock will likely decline when it becomes known that the company is providing surveillance cameras for concentration camps or producing ICBMs targeting American cities. You would think that demanding this kind of disclosure would be unobjectionable—but then why is it so hard? Is it because China would be offended? October 2019 • Volume 48, Number 10 • Roger W. Robinson, Jr. • Economics , Foreign Policy , National Defense -- Clarence Thomas and the Lost Constitution While the hallowed doctrine of stare decisis —the rule that judges are bound to respect precedent—certainly applies to the lower courts, Supreme Court justices owe fidelity to the Constitution alone, and if their predecessors have construed it erroneously, today’s justices must say so and overturn their decisions. September 2019 • Volume 48, Number 9 • Myron Magnet • Government , Law 1 2 3 … 63 Next » Search website Subscribe to Imprimis Now About Imprimis Imprimis is the free monthly speech digest of Hillsdale College and is dedicated to educating citizens and promoting civil and religious liberty by covering cultural, economic, political, and educational issues. The content of Imprimis is drawn from speeches delivered at Hillsdale College events. First published in 1972, Imprimis is one of the most widely circulated opinion publications in the nation with over 5.5 million subscribers. Get your FREE print subscription to Imprimis now! Find out how you can help Hillsdale promote civil and religious liberty by supporting Imprimis . Recent Issues American Sports Are Letting Down America Four Months of Unprecedented Government Malfeasance Thoughts on the Current Crisis The Roots of Our Partisan Divide The Urgent Need for a United States Space Force Topics American Liberalism Conservatism Culture Economics Education Elections Foreign Policy Government Healthcare History Immigration Journalism Law Law Enforcement National Defense Philanthropy Race Relations Religion Contributors Author selection Select Author... Adam Meyerson Al Hassenzahl Alan Keyes Alan Reynolds Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Alex Berenson Alexander Capron Alexander Haig, Jr. Alexandra York Allan Carlson Allan Guelzo Amity Shlaes Amy Wax Andrei Illarionov Andrew C. McCarthy Andrew Napolitano Andrew Roberts Anthony Daniels Arianna Huffington Arianna Stassinopoulos Arlan Gilbert Arnaud de Borchgrave Arthur Shenfield Avi Nelson B. A. Rogge Balint Vazsonyi Barbara Keating-Edh Barry Asmus Beatrice Muchman Benazir Bhutto Benjamin Netanyahu Benjamin Rogge Bernard David Bernard F. Link Bernard H Siegen Bernard Lewis Bishop Emrick Bob Barr Bob Beltz Bob Thomas Bob Williams Bradley Smith Brian T. Kennedy Brit Hume Bruce Herschensohn Burton Folsom, Jr. C. John Miller C. Lowell Harriss Cal Thomas Carl Henry Carol Ann Barker Casey Mulligan Caspar Weinberger Chamberlain Charles Colson Charles Koch Charles Krauthammer Charles Leerhsen Charles Lichenstein Charles Murray Charles R. Kesler Charles Sykes Charlton Heston Christina Hoff Sommers Christopher Caldwell Christopher DeMuth Christopher Manion Clarence Thomas Claude Koch Craig Chester Cynthia Grenier D James Kennedy D.T. Armentano Dan Coats Dan Quayle Daniel Dreiisbach Daniel Graham Daniel Young Dave Thomas David Brooks David Crane David French David McCullough David P. Goldman Dean Kleckner Dick Armey Dinesh D'Souza Dixy Lee Ray Don Paarlberg Donald Devine Donald R. Mossey Donald Reynolds Dr Edward J Epstein Duncan Williams Earl Butz Ed Rubenstein Edmund Fairfield Edmund Opitz Edward J. Erler Edward Krug Edward Lowe Edward Teller Edwin Feulner Edwin Meese III Elena Bonner Elizabeth Whelan Erik von Keuhnelt Ernest van den Haag F. A. Hayek F. Lee Bailey F.A. Harper Forrest McDonald Foster Friess Francis Steiner Frank Buckley Frank J. Gaffney Frank Shakespeare Fred Barnes Fred Chappell Fritz Steiger Gary Bauer Gaylord K Swim George F. Will George Gilder George Nash George Roche Gerhart Niemeyer Gilbert Meilaender Girda Bikales Glenn Loury Grover G Norquist H. Norman Schwarzkopf Hans Sennholz Harry Browne Harry Jaffa Harry Summers Harvey C. Mansfield Heather Mac Donald Henry Hazlitt Henry Regnery Herbert E. Meyer Herbert Markley Hugh Newton Humberto Belli Ira Corn, Jr. Irving Kristol J. Clif...