Meet the Conservative Professionals Remaking Family LifeIntercollegiate Review | Conservatism's sharpest voices, curated weekly. ISI's weekly newsletter brings you the best in serious conservative thought.Between Tradwife and GirlbossCATEGORY: ECONOMICS (8 MIN READ)Growing up, young girls receive all sorts of messages about what it means to be a woman and to balance work and family. Tradwife influencers urge girls to get married young and stay home full-time with their children, while the girlboss movement tells them to freeze their eggs and focus on their careers. But for many women, the most desirable path lies somewhere between these two extremes. In an article for The Wall Street Journal, Rachel Wolfe and Paul Overberg highlight how young conservative women, in particular, are working to balance motherhood with careers in the 21st-century workforce. Wolfe and Overberg interviewed several conservative women who shared about their choices to have children young and build their careers around their families rather than the other way around. Thanks to remote work and other flexible arrangements, these women have found ways to be present with their children at home while still advancing in their careers. Wolfe and Overberg point out that the prioritization of family and children is becoming a uniquely conservative characteristic. Fifteen years ago, liberal and conservative women between the ages of 18 and 35 had children at roughly the same rate—but in 2024, 75% of liberal women in that age range were childless, as compared with only 40% of conservative women. Read the rest of Wolfe and Overberg’s article (available via free email sign-up) to learn more.
COVID Cautious, Five Years LaterCATEGORY: CULTURE (6 MIN READ)2025 marked five years since the COVID pandemic and lockdowns upended life in America. Although the extended shutdowns had lasting effects on our nation’s economy and educational systems, on the outside, life five years later appears much the same as before. Only a few relics of the COVID shutdowns remain: ignored social distancing signs, some extra hand sanitizer dispensers, and the occasional mask. To a small yet vocal minority, this return to life as normal is nothing short of a moral failure. In an article for UnHerd, Ryan Zickgraf shines the spotlight on the Zero Covid community—a radical group of activists who are convinced that the pandemic never ended and are dedicated to shaming those who have moved on from the extreme masking requirements and gathering restrictions of the early pandemic days. Zickgraf explores the psychological underpinnings of the movement: the Zero Covid community gathered vulnerable people together and “endowed their anxiety with moral weight,” telling them that they were saving lives by holding the line. Because their very identity is centered around the supposed emergency, the Covid cautious are left without an off-ramp into normal life in the real world. In the end, the ones who are hurt the most by this are the COVID-cautious themselves. Read the rest of Zickgraf’s article here. CompendiumEvery article we feature here is available to read for free. Articles from paywalled publications are available through gift links.
This week, from ISI’s Digital Media:What explains the growing divide between older and younger conservatives? In the latest episode of Modern Age with Dan McCarthy, Dan explores the ideological, cultural, and economic rifts between the Reagan-Buckley generation and Gen Z conservatives. Is this a generational clash or the start of a new conservative movement? Subscribe to Modern Age with Dan McCarthy here. This week, from the Collegiate Network:ISI’s Collegiate Network supports over 80 student-run publications across the country, empowering students to run independent college newspapers, magazines, and journals that report on important issues ignored by the mainstream media.
Visit our Student Journalism section to read more from the Collegiate Network. The Iron LadyCATEGORY: HISTORY (15 MIN READ)Just as the 1980s brought a sea of change to American politics through the election of conservative Ronald Reagan, so too did that decade reshape British politics with the ascendance of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The longest-tenured prime minister of the 20th century, Thatcher left an indelible impact on the United Kingdom. For this week’s article from Modern Age, British author Christopher Sandford honors Thatcher, who would have turned 100 this October. Sandford details the economic woes haunting the UK during the 1970s. In fact, he notes that the winter of 1978–79 was called the “Winter of Discontent.” But out of that winter came Thatcher, who slashed inflation rates dramatically in her first term and gave financial power back to the private sector. Besides economics, Sandford also mentions Thatcher’s foreign policy—her alliance with Ronald Reagan during the Cold War and her prescient doubt about Britain’s involvement in the European “superstate.” And Sandford eloquently describes Thatcher’s defense of the Falkland Islands after Argentina invaded. In sum, Sandford describes Thatcher as an “enigmatic colossus of postwar Western life” who maintained a remarkable “clarity of vision” throughout her time in office. Read more about Thatcher in Sandford’s article here on the Modern Age website. Modern Age is ISI’s flagship publication. Visit modernagejournal.com and subscribe to receive a free daily newsletter. “Defeat? I do not recognise the meaning of the word.” Celebrate America’s semiquincentennial with ISI and help shape the next 250 years of our country. Your support of the America 500 Education Fund will help ISI reach, teach, and launch the next generation of conservative leaders. Visit isi.org/america500 to learn more. |