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Elon Musk exposes the dimensions of election interference at Twitter
Liberty is a fragile quality, and the nation is now witnessing just how close it has come to losing it.
SharesAttacking the U.S. Constitution, from either the left or right, is wrong
The Constitution is the anchor that has kept the U.S. ship of state riding smartly through political tempests that have claimed less fortunate sovereignties.
SharesIn 303 Creative v. Elenis, Supreme Court can no longer punt
The Supreme Court on Monday heard 303 Creative v. Elenis, involving a Christian designer in Colorado who, for moral and religious reasons, refuses to design websites for potential customers related to same-sex marriage.
SharesLack of regulatory clarity puts crypto in the crosshairs
Whether we like it or not, cryptocurrency is the future of global finance.
SharesChina no longer warrants a free pass for carbon emissions
Proponents of globalism, including President Biden, are clinging to an outmoded climate policy with respect to China.
SharesWhy does the Republican Party get blindsided at every turn?
At one time, having flat feet (i.e., fallen arches) was a disqualifying condition for serving in the military. If that were true in politics as well, the Republican Party would get a "4-F" as unfit for service.
SharesBringing jobs home -- the right way
If the last two years have taught us anything, it's that U.S. policymakers erred when they allowed the regulatory burden to grow so intrusive that it gave companies incentive to relocate their businesses overseas.
SharesNever Trump 2.0 underway
The occupiers of the political left and right who have lived to hate Donald Trump for the past six years have mobilized again to defeat the former president's campaign to regain the White House.
SharesYour congressional representatives may be the real 'threat to democracy'
This month almost a dozen Republican senators joined all 50 of their Democratic colleagues to vote to proceed to a final vote on the ill-named Respect for Marriage Act.
SharesClimate change extremists come unglued
In 1936, several decades before anyone had ever heard the term social media "influencer," business educator Dale Carnegie published "How to Win Friends and Influence People."
SharesLiving off Biden's freebies is not the American way
America was built by the "working stiff," ordinary men and women doing ordinary jobs to earn the means to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.
SharesIn this lame duck Congress, start with stopping the spend
If you were to ask 10 different people what the No. 1 problem in America is today, there's a good chance at least seven of them would say inflation.
SharesFreedom dies in Biden's climate madness
The arc of history may slant in the direction of liberty, but the future could take a different tack.
SharesNew D.C. criminal code is the wrong execution of the right idea
This week, the D.C. Council unanimously passed a new criminal code that could create chaos for the courts and disarm judges and juries with sentencing power to be tough on crime.
SharesDon't count Donald Trump out
On Tuesday evening, Donald Trump announced he was running for president in 2024, and all the usual suspects immediately dismissed his candidacy.
SharesElections for dummies
It is clear that Americans consider it very important to vote in order to be an upstanding member of society. Less certain, though, is whether our voting system is on the up and up.
SharesAvoiding election 'deja vu' in Georgia
In Georgia, as baseball legend Yogi Berra once said, "It's like deja vu all over again." Just like two years ago, a Senate seat from Georgia is again heading to a runoff.
SharesSome states resist the growing grip of marijuana
Two more states joined the American pot parade on Election Day. That's bad news. The good news, though, is that three other states wisely said, "No, thanks."
SharesShivering implications of the U.N.'s climate confab COP27
Environmentalists attending the United Nations' annual climate conference are facing a steep challenge -- and it's not rising temperatures.
SharesWhat to make of the red wave that never materialized?
Rosy predictions Republicans would pick up as many as 35 seats in the House of Representatives and hold a 53-seat majority in the U.S. Senate will not materialize.
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