Gerrymandering: Politicians Choosing Their Voters
Gerrymandering: Politicians Choosing Their Voters
Anew civil war is brewing. Texas is redistricting its electoral map to help a few Republican candidates in 2026. Democrats in California, New York, and Illinois are threatening retaliatory manipulations of their own. How does gerrymandering work? What shall we do about it? In our Republic, voters are supposed to choose their public servants. With...
By Dr. Alex Tokarev, Kristin Tokarev
Sheriff Trump cleans up Washington D.C.
Sheriff Trump cleans up Washington D.C.
President Donald Trump gave the Left one more reason to call him a “fascist” by sending the National Guard to Washington, D.C. Some of Trump’s own supporters are also expressing their frustration with the measures, pointing out that the American Republic was founded in principled opposition to the use of standing armies to police its...
By Dr. Alex Tokarev, Kristin Tokarev
Rebutting Claims in ‘State of Labor is Nothing to Celebrate’ Op-Ed
Rebutting Claims in ‘State of Labor is Nothing to Celebrate’ Op-Ed
We appreciate Dave Clark’s heartfelt Labor Day reflections in the Midland Daily News on September 1, 2025, “State of labor is nothing to celebrate.” Working families deserve more than slogans; they require a clear understanding of what drives wages, opportunities, and dignity at work. Northwood University’s philosophy — which values individual freedom, personal responsibility, and...
By Dr. Timothy Nash, Anthony Storer
Protestant Institutionalism and Christian America
Protestant Institutionalism and Christian America
Beginning in the 1970s, American Christians sensing a cultural shift engaged in a war of polemics with secularists like Madalyn Murray O’Hair over whether America was founded as a “Christian nation.” Over the last few years, this continuing controversy has diversified into something more niche: a debate over the threat, or promise, of “Christian nationalism.”...
By Dr. Glenn Moots
Core vs Headline: What Really Drives Inflation Calculations
Core vs Headline: What Really Drives Inflation Calculations
For decades, economists and central bankers have relied more on the Core Consumer Price Index (CPI) than the headline CPI because Core CPI excludes volatile food and energy prices; this permits a clearer read on long-term inflation trends, which is critical for setting interest rates and guiding economic policy. Think of it like steering a...
By Dr. Timothy Nash
Tiger on the Mekong?
Tiger on the Mekong?
Vietnam, a nation that still languishes under the thumb of a government with an avowed communist ideology, intends to become Asia’s next “tiger economy.” Ravaged by the civil war that split the country in two, and drew the United States into the sort of regional conflict that it had long sought to avoid, in 1975,...
By Dr. Jake Scott
Northwood Free Enterprise Center Director Discusses Fed Governor Firing
Northwood Free Enterprise Center Director Discusses Fed Governor Firing
Dr. Timothy G. Nash, Vice President, Emeritus, and Director of the Northwood University Center for the Advancement of Free Enterprise and Entrepreneurship, recently shared helpful insight about the function of the Federal Reserve and the recent firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook. Dr. Nash’s expertise was captured in the following interview with Mike Austin on...
By Kate Hessling
The Foundational Role of Private Property
The Foundational Role of Private Property
There is growing interest in socialist ideas, especially among college-age Americans. To be precise, 62% of young Americans between 18 and 29 years old have a favorable view of socialism, according to a 2025 survey by Cato Institute and YouGov. This makes Friedrich A. Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom, a critique of the dangers of...
By Daniel J. Smith, Dr. Gabriel Benzecry
Doing Good by Doing Well
Doing Good by Doing Well
As a business professor, I strive to teach sound principles and practices, focusing on the benefits of productivity and value creation. I want my students pursuing business careers to be proud of their chosen profession. While business ethics is a topic worthy of classroom coverage and discussion, I do not view my role as one...
By Kimberlee Josephson
One Man’s Poison Is Another Man’s Cure
One Man’s Poison Is Another Man’s Cure
Tim Friede let venomous snakes bite him roughly 200 times, suffering anaphylactic shocks, and spending four days hospitalized in a coma. But this wasn’t a suicide attempt. He was seeking immunity to all snake venom, so that his blood could be used to create a universal antitoxin. The Centivax startup reports promising results from an...
By Arthur Diamond
Pursuit of Happiness: The Growth of a Radical Idea
Pursuit of Happiness: The Growth of a Radical Idea
The idea that people have an unalienable right to pursue their own happiness is a very radical idea. Prior to the eighteenth century, almost no one in the world believed it. Even today, only a small sliver of humankind agrees with it. Equally radical is the idea that the only purpose of government is to...
By John C. Goodman
Sneaking Snacks into Movies and the Mystery of Social Order
Sneaking Snacks into Movies and the Mystery of Social Order
Last month, like many, I went to see the newly released Superman movie by James Gunn. As a kid, I loved the 1978 Superman film with Christopher Reeve and the scene when he takes Lois Lane for an evening flight is one of my favorites. Margot Kidder portrayed Lane as smart and quirky — and...
By Kimberlee Josephson
The Collapse of Britain’s National Health Service
The Collapse of Britain’s National Health Service
It’s a poorly-kept secret that Britain’s National Health Service (NHS) has faced crisis after crisis. But the latest scandal over 3 million “unseen patients” may be its worst yet. In fact, this omnicrisis is worsened by the fact that barely anyone is speaking about it. Throughout the 2000s, headlines warned of an overwhelmed and underfunded...
By Dr. Jake Scott
Northwood University Freedom Seminar to Explore Road to Serfdom, Path to Freedom
Northwood University Freedom Seminar to Explore Road to Serfdom, Path to Freedom
Northwood University will launch its 2025 Freedom Seminar on Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025, with a keynote address by Professor Daniel J. Smith, a Northwood alumnus and Director of the Political Economy Research Institute at Middle Tennessee State University. Smith will explore the continuing relevance of Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek’s critique of socialism and its application...
By Kate Hessling