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Posts by Jacqueline Isaacs

Jacqueline Isaacs is the Director of Strategy for Bellwether Communications, where she crafts content strategies for thought leaders. She also serves as the firm’s managing partner in Nashville, TN. She has wide-ranging experience in media relations for national brands and content marketing for nonprofits. She previously served as the Fellow in Strategic Communication with the American Studies Program in Washington, DC. She holds an MBA in Marketing from Johns Hopkins University and a BS in Government from Oral Roberts University. She is the co-author of the book, Called to Freedom: Why You Can Be Christian and Libertarian, and she voiced the recently released audio book version, now available on Audible.

Why Certainty is a Charlatan

Recently, we’ve been working through several books that are seemingly unconnected—other than being newly consumed by yours truly. However, as I considered their many messages, I began to see some powerful themes. We began with Wilhelm Röpke’s “A Humane Economy,” the...

The Spiritual Danger of Doing Good

Recently I asked this question: What would cause an entire civilization to pass on permanent things—such as truth, justice and liberty—and accept tyranny out of apathy? This question is in response to the admonition of conservative minds from the fields of art,...

There's More to Fear Than Atomic Bombs

“I do not fear the atomic bomb. If there is a threat to our civilization, it is more likely to come from boredom that will result from a totalitarian welfare state and from the exclusion of individual enterprise and the spirit of adventure.” Those words were said by...

Doing Bad by Doing Good

The Cato Institute recently hosted an event with Christopher J. Coyne called “Doing Bad by Doing Good: Why Humanitarian Action Fails” to discuss his new book by the same title. Coyne is a professor at George Mason University and the director of the F. A. Hayek Program...

Thirty Is Not the New Twenty

Christians ought to care about the poor, and more than that, they ought to act to help the poor. This moral obligation to act is not only for middle-aged adults in a stable career with a dependable income, but sometimes we act like it is. We tell young people that...