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Confusion about Commandeering
State governments are not instrumentalities or vassals of the federal government but rather sovereign entities with their own legal authority.

A Climate Science Manual for Judges Discredits Itself
All is not well with the Reference Manual for Scientific Evidence. This is a loss for the public trust of science.

American Immortals
Unlike other abolitionists, though, Douglass never lost his faith in the American Founding. Indeed, he believed that the fundamental premises of our republic were the very principles that could save her from this moral crisis.
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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.

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.

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.
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Can Kevin Warsh Save the Fed from Fiscal Dominance?
Without fiscal reform, no chairman, Warsh included, will be able to escape the dismal reality for long.

A Climate Science Manual for Judges Discredits Itself
All is not well with the Reference Manual for Scientific Evidence. This is a loss for the public trust of science.

American Immortals
Unlike other abolitionists, though, Douglass never lost his faith in the American Founding. Indeed, he believed that the fundamental premises of our republic were the very principles that could save her from this moral crisis.

When Duvall Played Stalin
It’s strange to compliment an actor for impersonating a tyrant, but it is an act of courage.

When Vanity Leads to Impropriety
A president should simply not be allowed to name anything after himself without checks from Congress or an independent commission.

Retracing a Catastrophe: Lessons from Solzhenitsyn’s The Red Wheel
As Ideology has continued to exist in transmogrified forms after its Marxist-Leninist version, Solzhenitsyn remains a sure guide into its dark labyrinths.

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.

Two Hails For The Chief’s NDA
Instead of trying to futilely plug the dam to stop leaks, the Court should release a safety valve.

Men and Women: Equal but Beautifully Distinct
Powerful interests are being served, but they are not those of young women competing in adolescent sports, or the larger need of our society to know that its words, laws, and public speech conform to the reality that we did not summon into being.

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

America’s Roundabout Revolution
Increased implementation of the roundabout would prove beneficial to the United States.

The AI Future: Between Certain Doom and Endless Prosperity
AI continues to become more complex and sophisticated, but public policy solutions do not.

The Castle, the Cathedral, and the College
Our civilization struggles to explain why anything should command allegiance beyond preference or power; its remnants echo a grandeur now distant.

Politics and the Possibility of the Humanities
Yes, universities have a political aspect; they grant degrees, but their purpose is ultimately to inquire into what makes human beings flourish.

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