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Harvest deep-sea minerals to combat China
China controls the critical minerals that underpin America's economy, including materials used in missiles, microchips, electric vehicles and data centers.
SharesFree Jimmy Lai
Last week, a Hong Kong court imposed a 20-year prison sentence on Jimmy Lai, China's most prominent advocate for freedom of speech and the press.
SharesTurn the page on NIH's dark animal testing chapter
Members of Congress recently spoke out on Anthony Fauci's cruel legacy of animal experimentation funded by the National Institutes of Health, and they're right.
SharesDollar stability defies Trump's political turbulence
In recent weeks, the dollar has fallen against most other currencies, but President Trump appears little disturbed.
SharesThe U.S. must get out of the U.N.
The United Nations was a problem 20 years ago. It has only worsened since.
SharesPatriotism starts at home, so teach your children well
American citizenship is being unmade in schools and on social media before our very eyes.
SharesWhy young adults need Dating 101
Young adults are in the midst of a "dating recession."
SharesD.C. needs the death penalty
The District of Columbia needs the death penalty, and Congress should restore it.
SharesWhen courts conspire to violate freedoms
A federal appeals court recently ruled that Montgomery County Public Schools didn't violate a substitute's rights by requiring her to use a transgender student's preferred pronouns.
SharesAs Rome stays silent, Trump defends Jimmy Lai
Last week, Jimmy Lai, the pro-democracy activist and former Hong Kong media magnate, was handed a 20-year prison sentence, the harshest yet imposed under China's national security law.
Shares'East Haven Four' deserve presidential pardon
Two days after my daughter's delivery, I was holding her in my arms when my father called. He told me my husband, a decorated police officer, had just been found guilty of felony civil rights violations.
SharesDon't trust U.K. on Diego Garcia
President Trump is a real estate man. He knows when he is being played, and the British are playing him over some important Indian Ocean real estate.
SharesA Super Bowl ad called out antisemitism; colleges should, too
One of the most talked-about Super Bowl ads from this year was set in a high school hallway.
SharesConvention of states offers constitutional path to restrain runaway federal power
It's only February, but news networks are obsessed with the November elections. Why all the attention?
SharesTaiwan is not China's Sudetenland
Beijing has tried for years to convince the world that Taiwan is its ultimate, sacred "core interest," the one issue that eclipses everything else.
SharesDemocrats' ICE opposition shutdown echoes 'defund the police' 2.0
Remember the politicians who joined the "defund the police" mobs in 2020? When it came to putting their money where their mouths were, most of the rhetoric turned out to be posturing.
SharesHarm reduction, not prohibition, right approach to nicotine
When we try to control people's choices through punishment or sweeping mandates, we often create new harms while failing to address the old ones.
SharesTrump nuclear revival brings dependable power back to U.S. grid
Several decades ago, hippies stifled an entire industry by prancing around with cardboard signs reading "No nukes."
SharesWhy do Virginia's lawmakers want teachers fired?
The Virginia General Assembly will soon consider legislation that could exacerbate rather than solve public schools' many problems.
SharesPotomac River sewage dump: Where is the liberal environmental outrage?
At least 240 million gallons of raw sewage, the largest spill of wastewater in U.S. history, have drained into the Potomac River.
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