From this summer’s Claremont Review of Books: “[Kori] Schake’s superb historical overview demonstrates the resiliency of America’s civil-military structure throughout the history of the republic."
Congratulations to AEI's Kori Schake.
https://t.co/SjhS4CgJcg
My latest for @AEI argues we shouldn't reject AI just because it's a screen. The question is whether it's used to strengthen cognition and effort or displace it. AI "may be education's greatest opportunity and its steepest threat."
https://t.co/DJZHT13MnT
New from @washingtonpost: A report from @natmalkus finds that varsity athletes had higher attendance rates than other students, even when their sports were not in-season
https://t.co/gaLUa4oPdL
Student loan reform should prioritize paths toward repayment, not cancellation.
AEI’s @PrestonCooper93 explains how the Repayment Assistance Plan helps borrowers responsibly reduce debt over time. https://t.co/jbTLZWhZ9Q
“There has been very little legislation. It’s true the “big, beautiful bill” is law, but Donald Trump has signed fewer pieces of legislation than any president in the modern era.”
AEI’s Yuval Levin with Ezra Klein on Trump’s first year back in office.
https://t.co/FMv2OXIH7P
Republicans should defend the filibuster not out of nostalgia, fear, or inertia but because it remains vital to the constitutional order and is a deeply conservative tool, writes AEI’s Laura Dove in a new report.
https://t.co/qssYXQZqEb
AEI is pleased to announce that The Projects: A New History of Public Housing by Howard Husock was named one of The Wall Street Journal Best Books of 2025 in Politics. https://t.co/7loKR6Eaei
AEI is pleased to welcome Senator @BenSasse as a nonresident senior fellow.
Sen. Sasse was the president of the University of Florida and represented Nebraska in the US Senate for eight years.
AEI's @rpondiscio breaks down new UC San Diego data on Gen Z math failures, grade inflation, COVID learning loss and why colleges can’t spot unprepared students.
JUST RELEASED:
America’s Human Arithmetic by AEI’s Nicholas Eberstadt discusses what’s driving American disaffection despite unparalleled wealth.
The Unheavenly City Revisited by Edward Banfield, republished by AEI’s @kevinrkosar, explores the reality of America’s big cities.
AEI's @PrestonCooper93 testified at a Senate HELP Committee hearing last week, arguing that opaque college pricing frustrates families and contributes to rising college costs.
Read his adapted testimony here:
https://t.co/9ynlcoLz0f
JUST RELEASED IN PAPERBACK: Extinction of Experience, by AEI's Christine Rosen, investigates the cultural and emotional shifts that accompany our embrace of technology.
https://t.co/H8zH06Osk6
Don't ask Armenia where Putin was when they needed Russia.
Don't ask Assad where Putin was when they needed Russia.
Don't ask Iran where Putin was when they needed Russia.
If and when Venezuela needs Russia to survive, expect Putin to MIA.
https://t.co/ntBUzdXe2n
JUST LAUNCHED: AEI's new Center for the Future of the American University will work with faculty, administrators, and trustees to develop ideas and projects that can help universities better play their indispensable roles in our civic and political life.
https://t.co/hWyOGfQBhq
JUST RELEASED: The latest issue of The American Enterprise —
• @MrDanielBuck on the digitization of American schooling
• @KoriSchake on civilian control of the military
• Mark Warshawsky on The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation's failure
https://t.co/ncPhDfIIjf
You open your feed to see a startling satellite image: a military base on fire. But is it real? It's become harder to tell.
I warn of the risks posed by fake satellite imagery in this piece for TIME.
https://t.co/orgusKLRG5