
Gratitude, Grit, and Miracles: The New Facts of Jewish Life in America
Jews have rarely lived among neighbors who regarded their lives as valuable as anyone else’s — who would risk their own lives rather than look the other way.

Major Questions Doctrine and Its Bipartisan History
Administrative law is important because it provides the framework for so many significant fights about policy. Unfortunately, it is also often misunderstood.

Liberal Education as Civic Renewal
The right to pursue happiness that is enshrined in the Declaration of Independence implies “a chance at a good life.” This year’s Semiquincentennial offers a perfect opportunity to restore the education on which that chance depends.

Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations Turns 250
"On the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations" was published this month in 1776.

Oil, War, and Peace
The deeper question about these matters is why the energy crunch had to occur at all.

AI Needs Consumer Choice, Not Bureaucratic Control
The regulatory approach treats consumer AI as a problem to be solved rather than as another service best left to a competitive, dynamic market to provide consumers with autonomy and choice.

The Start-Up Paradox: The Coming Red Shift in Innovation
Despite London's success, the future of innovation is securely in American hands for the foreseeable future.

Oren Cass's Bad Timing
Cass’s critique misses the most telling point about today’s economy: U.S. companies are on top because they consistently outcompete their global rivals.

Kevin Warsh’s Challenge to Fed Groupthink
Kevin Warsh understands the Fed’s mandate, respects its independence, and is willing to question comfortable assumptions when the evidence demands it.

Oren Cass’s Unquenchable Appetite for Regulation
Cass’s “more regulation” program is just an all-you-can-eat buffet for Wall Street and K Street.

Iran and the Laws of War
The Iran war gives the United States the opportunity to re-formulate the rules of war, not to fight the old conflicts of the twentieth century.
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Yes, AI Minister
The future is already here. Albania's AI minister Diella is changing the way nations think about governance.

What Happened to Tucker?
In his new book, “Hated by All the Right People: Tucker Carlson and the Unraveling of the Conservative Mind,” Jason Zengerle attempts to answer one of America’s most pressing questions: “What the hell happened to Tucker Carlson?”

“Antisemitism” in Cognitive Warfare: A Warning for America
The Hebrew nation, within and beyond Israel, will undoubtedly survive — it always does. But will America?

California’s Billionaire Tax Is Not a One-Time Tax
History has a very clear answer to what "one-time" and "only the wealthy" mean in the long run: ongoing, and not only the wealthy.

Major Questions Doctrine and Its Bipartisan History
Administrative law is important because it provides the framework for so many significant fights about policy. Unfortunately, it is also often misunderstood.

Trump’s Tariff Tantrum
Trump leaps from the frying pan into the fire in the aftermath of Learning Resources v. Trump.

The Administrative State’s Sludge
Congress has delegated so much power across so many statutes that it’s hard to find a question of any public importance to which some agency cannot point to policymaking authority.
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The Roberts Court Invokes Congress and the Constitution
The Court's message is that ultimate policy authority lies in the hands of Congress.

Slavery and the Republic
As America begins to celebrate its semiquincentennial, much ink has been spilled questioning whether that event is worth commemorating at all. Joseph Ellis’s The Great Contradiction could not be timelier.

Liberal Education as Civic Renewal
The right to pursue happiness that is enshrined in the Declaration of Independence implies “a chance at a good life.” This year’s Semiquincentennial offers a perfect opportunity to restore the education on which that chance depends.

Becoming All-American
Blue Moon takes place on the evening of March 31, 1943, the opening night of Oklahoma!

The Original Sin of U.S. Health Care
As long as most Americans receive health insurance as an invisible, employer-managed fringe benefit, health care will remain expensive, opaque, and unresponsive.
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The False Equivalence of Multicultural Day
Parents have an affirmative obligation to reinforce patriotic values and counter the narratives that are taught in school.

Norman Podhoretz: American Patriot, Faithful Jew, and Indomitable Defender of Civilization
Podhoretz never turned on the promise of America.


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