The argument in favor of using filler text goes something like this: If you use real content in the Consulting Process, anytime you reach a review point you’ll end up reviewing and negotiating the content itself and not the design.
National Affairs is a quarterly journal of essays on domestic policy, political economy, society, culture, and political thought. It aims to assist Americans in thinking more clearly about our public life and responding more adeptly to the challenges of self-government. Each issue features engaging yet serious essays on a variety of domestic issues: from economics and health care to education and welfare; from contemporary legal debates to the enduring dilemmas of society and culture. We shall devote special attention to the deeper theoretical questions of American self-government—endeavouring to cut through conventional wisdom, aid you in making sense of complex issues, offer concrete proposals, and illuminate the ideas that steer our politics. In doing so, we strive to follow in the footsteps of our intellectual and institutional predecessor, The Public Interest, a journal that for decades enriched our public life with its unmatched clarity and wisdom. We aspire to provide the same service to Americans tackling the challenges of a new era and to serve as a platform for a new generation of thinkers and writers seeking to influence the affairs of the nation.