Why We Don’t Read (Yet) — and How to Start Again

We live in a strange cultural moment: books have never been more accessible, yet reading has never been more neglected. National surveys show a steep, decades-long decline in reading for pleasure, with some reports estimating a nearly 40 percent drop in daily leisure reading over the past twenty years. Another study from the American Academy of Arts & Sciences found that the percentage of adults who read at least one book outside of work each year has fallen steadily as well. These numbers confirm what many already feel in their own lives: people who once devoured novels now struggle to finish a chapter, and countless purchased books remain untouched. The question isn’t whether reading has declined—but why.

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Students walking across a university campus on a bright autumn morning toward a historic academic building with sunlight.

Restoring True Diversity

At one of America’s most elite universities, I expected open debate and fearless inquiry. Instead, I found silence—an unspoken rule that Christian thought belongs behind closed doors. This essay exposes how elite campuses celebrate diversity while quietly excluding faith from intellectual life. It’s a call for universities to rediscover real inclusion—where Christian voices aren’t merely tolerated, but respected as essential to understanding truth, human dignity, and the moral foundations of education itself.

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