Rod Dreher is an American journalist who writes about politics, culture, religion, and foreign affairs. He is author of a number of books, including the New York Times bestsellers The Benedict Option (2017) and Live Not By Lies (2020), both of which have been translated into over ten languages. He is director of the Network Project of the Danube Institute in Budapest, where he lives.
America’s lady diplomats fail to bend African strongmen to their will
Our cultural guardians do not allow us to consider the role that voodoo plays in shaping how Haitians see the world and their place in it.
The campaign team’s grip on reality is as shaky as the president’s grip on clarity
The ‘Symbolic World’ on how to survive the end of this world.
“If you want to have a rules-based international order, you shouldn’t penalize Poland or Hungary for having [views] that are different from Brussels.”
All trads are a little ‘fake.’ The truth is, all traditionalism in our wretched age is—given what the previous generations have taken from us.
No blockbusters in Carlson interview, but still a teaching moment
“We have to stop punishing ourselves for considering things that once seemed crazy,” says Bret Weinstein.
Brussels has taken of the gloves with a blackmail plan to destroy Hungary’s economy.
From Eagle Pass to Lampedusa: As goes the Rio Grande, so goes the Mediterranean?
A dreadful Trump-Biden match-up seems like old times for Louisiana voters
Houellebecq may be decadent in his personal life, but no novelist sees Europe’s religious crisis with clearer eyes.