Recently, an orthodox Russellian tenet has come under fire from within. In particular, some Russellians now argue that definite descriptions don't semantically encode uniqueness. Instead, Reformed Russellians, as I call them, hold that definite descriptions are truth-theoretically identical to indefinite ones. On this approach, a definite description's uniqueness reading becomes a matter of pragmatics, not semantics. These reforms, we're told, provide both empirical and methodological benefits over and above the prevailing orthodoxy. As I argue, however, the Russellian Reformation contains serious flaws. Indeed, it is Orthodox Russellianism that remains a superior choice, both empirically and conceptually.