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3/17/2025

Last week’s curation at RealClear’s American Civics portal starts with Shawn Healy's op-ed at The Hechinger Report that argues that civics education needs our support. Healy is the executive director of CivXNow, a coalition of more than 370 institutions across America (which includes RealClear American Civics). He says that this bipartisan coalition agrees on the need to make a “generational investment in teaching students how the government works.” “We agree on a solution that will ensure the Spirit of 1776 forever endures: dedicated instructional time in civics should be the norm for every student throughout grades K-12,” Healy writes. Since the federal government cannot mandate a national curriculum, the solution lies with the states. Illinois, Indiana, and other states have shown the way forward, “strengthening K-12 civics instruction and incentivizing students’ civic development.” Healy says that high schools should mandate a year-long course in civics, “recognize civic excellence by offering ‘civic seals’ to high school graduates,” “require that districts develop and publish K-12 civic learning plans for public scrutiny, and recognize the schools and districts that show exemplary commitments to civic learning.”

At Law & Liberty, Jace Lington reviews Justice Neil Gorsuch’s book, “Over Ruled.” He maintains that Gorsuch and his co-author, Janie Nitze, show unequivocally that “the system the Progressives erected is not equal to the challenges of modern government.” The book details the myriad ways that bureaucracy has triumphed over lawmaking – and, ultimately, the consent of the governed. Citing Hilldale College's Ronald J. Pestritto, Gorsuch and Nitze make the case that the administrative state, the name given to the vast bureaucratic complex that was initiated by word and then deed by Woodrow Wilson, is fundamentally at odds with the structure of government the Constitution lays out. As Gorsuch and Nitze argue, “Prussian bureaucracy does not fit the American character.” They conclude, “Whatever noble intentions might have motivated abandoning the original constitution, the authors’ critique eviscerates the idea that unleashing detached administrators is the best way to establish justice in America.”

In the News

Gov. Cox Says Civics Is Key to Reducing Polarization

Bridger Beal-Cvetko, KSL

Are Calls for a Constitutional Convention Warranted?

Miguel A. Faria, RealClearHistory

Appeals Court Continues to Block Trump’s Birthright Citizenship EO

Rebecca Boone, AP

When Connecticut Ratified the Bill of Rights in 1939

Andrew Fowler, Yankee Institute

Colleges Must Do More to Promote Civics

Thad H. Westbrook, Greenville News

Taking the Temperature of the Nation

Mark Angelides, Liberty Nation

In Defense of America’s Two-Party System

David Lewis Schaefer, Ford Forum

Stop Neglecting Civic Education

Brigid Beaubien, Detroit News

How Are Places Named in the US?

Jordan Friedman, History.com

Why Government Teacher Amy Messick Ran For School Board

Ellen Tucker, Teaching American History

What Trump Meant by 'Illegal Protests'

Philip Hamburger, Wall Street Journal

During Civic Learning Week, Let’s Push for National Progress

Shawn Healy, Hechinger Report

How St. Patrick’s Day in 1776 Marked a Step Towards American Independence

Christopher Klein, History.com

The Militia in Early America: Guardians of Liberty and Order

Ronald Beaty, RealClearHistory

AZ Cardinals Host Breakfast to Honor National Civic Learning Week

Zach Gershman, Arizona Cardinals

Multimedia

Understanding America's Succession of Power

NPR

The 25th amendment. A few years before JFK was shot, an idealistic young lawyer set out on...

The National Summit on Civic Education 2024

Jack Miller Center

The third annual National Summit on Civic Education held in Philadelphia in November 2024 aimed to foster...

Cooperation, Not Compromise in the Classroom

Hoover Institution

Does a Stanford University initiative reinstating a century-old tradition of American civics learning offer a roadmap for...

Carl Cannon's Great American Stories

Great American Stories: America's Crown Jewels

One of the joys of my childhood was exploring Yosemite National Park with my father. Anyone who has ever been ...

Great American Stories: Bob Hope

Donald Trump's return to the White House in 2025 has produced a frenzy of activity designed to curb government excess. ...

Great American Stories: Reagan's Quote

On February 6, 1911, Nelle and Jack Reagan of Tampico, Illinois, welcomed their second son into the world. They named ...

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