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Trump's Russia strategy cedes victory to Putin
In 1988, when President Reagan was asked by a reporter during the summit in Moscow what his goal was in the Cold War, he said: "We win, they lose."
SharesAmerica's tech investment boom depends on strong IP reforms
The United States is in the midst of a tech investment boom.
SharesThe solution to America's cost-of-living crisis
So it's all about "affordability"? Yes, the cost of living is a huge problem for Americans, but a key factor is often ignored, one we can relearn from the first Thanksgiving.
SharesWill Trump's new Ukraine peace plan work?
President Trump is trying to impose a new peace plan for Ukraine, and among its most prominent features are items that would help the war against Ukraine.
SharesThis Giving Tuesday, reject fraudulent, wasteful 'philanthropies'
Four billion dollars. It's a gigantic sum, the amount Americans are expected to donate to charities on Giving Tuesday and an invitation for scammers, fundraising mills and wasteful charities.
SharesThe stunning rise of antisemitism in America's churches
It is absolutely stunning that tens of thousands, if not millions, of conservative Christians in the ranks of America's evangelical church are apparently shameless antisemites.
SharesDemocrats weaponize civil disobedience to silence opposition
The rightness or wrongness of acts of civil disobedience is in the mind of the beholder.
SharesThe decline of religion affects everything
President Eisenhower, the architect of our victory in Europe during World War II, observed, "Our form of government makes no sense unless it is founded in a deeply felt religious faith."
SharesThanksgiving gratitude must include hardship, not just harvest
The first Thanksgiving on American soil probably occurred in May 1541 near what is now Canyon, Texas, where Father Juan de Padilla said Mass for an army of 1,500 soldiers.
SharesLet's celebrate William F. Buckley Jr.'s centenary by emulating him
With antisemitism at a fever pitch, it's hard to believe that William F. Buckley Jr. ever existed.
SharesAmerica risks repeating Britain's unfolding drug price control disaster
The United States is toying with importing one of Britain's most disastrous policy blunders of modern times: government control over drug prices.
SharesTrump takes on radical secularism with powerful prayer move
As America approaches our 250th anniversary next year -- what the White House is dubbing "two and a half centuries of freedom" -- President Trump is on a mission to turn citizens back to the prayerful hope that helped fuel the nation's infancy and success.
SharesOn economy and energy, leftist ideology collides with the real world
If you watch them long enough, leftists will almost always acknowledge that their policies don't work.
SharesTrump's steel and aluminum tariffs are a national security imperative
As President Trump declared in recent days, tariffs are crucial for national security, including U.S. economic health.
SharesCOP30 climate summit hypocrisy undermines credibility on environmental policy
The "Conference of the Parties" (COP30) gathering in Belem, Brazil, this week is browbeating the world for its supposed lack of effort to protect the planet and climate.
SharesPatent office to unleash new wave of legal abuses
When he was confirmed in September, the new director of a little-noticed federal agency had an opportunity to remove a millstone from the necks of hardworking companies. He didn't take it.
SharesThe Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom cage match
On her never-ending book tour this week, former Vice President Kamala Harris shouted to the audience, "Release the files!" in reference to the infamous Epstein files. Never mind that she was vice president for four years and never mentioned Jeffrey Epstein's name.
SharesEnd racial discrimination in the federal government
The Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty and the Center for Individual Rights are filing a lawsuit against the federal government to ensure that all Americans are treated equally.
SharesLeftists and atheists and their bizarre fear of the Ten Commandments
A federal judge just ordered schools in Texas to stop posting copies of the Ten Commandments after hearing from parents of students who had complained the displays were offensive and infringed upon their First Amendment religious freedom rights.
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