Letters of Conscience
In an age when truth trembles beneath the weight of noise, we return to the language of conscience — to the measured cadence of thought that once shaped a nation. These letters are written in the spirit of our Founding Fathers, not as echoes of a distant past, but as instruments of renewal. Each letter carries a lesson forged in the fires of revolution and tempered by reason, calling us to examine the soul of our Republic anew. Here, history does not whisper — it instructs. And through these reflections, we summon the courage to act with virtue in an unvirtuous age.
The Duty to Govern: When Soapboxes Replace Statesmanship
For forty days, the Republic stood still — its doors closed, its workers unpaid, its leaders entangled in a performance of pride. In Letters of Conscience No. VII – The Duty to Govern, Nathan Sterling reflects on how both parties failed their duty to serve and honors the senators who finally crossed the aisle to reopen America’s government. A Hamiltonian appeal to humility, reason, and the forgotten art of governing over grandstanding.