Is Biden Replacing Bad Border Policy With Worse Border Policy?
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Plus: Schools suing social media companies, a bitcoin mining tax is a bad idea, and more...
He's not wrong about that.
Title 42 expulsions caused great harm for very little benefit. Biden plans to replace them with a combination of policies, some good and some very bad.
The GOP nominee can forge a humbler path on foreign policy—or turn back to failed neoconservatism.
From Russiagate to COVID discourse, elites in government and the media are trying to control and centralize free speech and open inquiry.
The loss of public key encryption service providers would make us all more vulnerable, both physically and financially.
The policy will protect thousands of Afghan refugees against imminent prospect of deportation. Same should be done for Ukrainians and others admitted to US using the parole power. But a permanent solution to this problem requires Congress to pass an adjustment act.
Are the plausible alternatives to continental governance any better?
The George Washington University historian argues that the group's paranoid mindset and obsessions are front and center in the modern GOP.
It has been reprinted (with permission) by the Cato Institute.
An argument that the wasteful law violates the Constitution's Port Preference Clause.
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Days after an American F-22 shot down a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of Myrtle Beach, a second floating object was shot down over the Yukon.
This can easily be accomplished by Congess enacting an adjustment act.
That doesn't mean Russia is right. It means we're being honest about how much the U.S. is involved.
"Christian libertarians" Bayard Rustin and David Dellinger challenged state power and ended up leading the civil rights movement and anti-Vietnam War protests.
Evan Gershkovich was arrested in Russia last month on espionage charges. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in a penal colony.
The credits may be well-intentioned, but they will distort the market and lead to a windfall for U.S. companies.
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He made it prior to being sentenced to 25 years in prison for speaking out against Vladimir Putin's war on Ukraine.
Never underestimate officials’ ability to turn embarrassing moments into awful opportunities.
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While escalation is not inevitable, it’s still a risk having any U.S. boots on the ground.
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Industrial policy is never as simple as it seems.
Does Ukraine face an existential risk? Does it matter?
Restricting foreign real estate ownership has something for both sides—conservatives don't like foreigners, and progressives don't like capital.
Excessive government interference in the market hurts consumers and thwarts policy goals. It also gets in the way of the government itself.
Revoking the 1991 and 2002 authorizations for the use of military force would be a good start, but the 2001 authorization has been used dozens of times to justify conflicts in numerous countries.
The economic historian and Magatte Wade, Alex Gladstein, Mohamad Machine-Chian, Tony Woodlief, and Tom Palmer are challenging authoritarians everywhere.
Volkswagen unveiled a cheap new electric concept car, but protectionist policies mean it's not worthwhile for the company to introduce it in the U.S.
Four years after IS was officially defeated, the U.S. continues to keep hundreds of troops in Syria to fight the vanquished terrorist group.
It would result in shortages, decreases in productivity, and higher production costs affecting millions of American workers and nearly every consumer.
If Republicans refuse to gore their three sacred cows, a new CBO report shows that balancing the budget is literally impossible.
Are we stumbling into disaster? Again?
Bolton says the Bush administration's biggest error in Iraq was failing to invade Iran too. That's madness.
There’s no vital U.S. interest served by this indefinite advise-and-assist mission in the region.
The charge is the crime of illegal kidnapping and deportation of Ukrainian children.
It's an impressive achievement. But we can do much more. Canada's much greater openness to immigration is an indication of what's possible.
There's little reason to believe that any of the tactics Republican politicians are proposing would be effective in keeping fentanyl out of the country.
More immigration from China would both hobble a geopolitical rival and make America richer and better.
What we did for Ukrainians, we could do for other migrants too.
Big corporations and entire industries constantly use their connections in Congress to get favors, no matter which party is in power.
DeSantis' foreign policy seems to be defined by a simple rule: Whatever Democrats do is wrong, but whatever Republicans do is right.
While a conservative skepticism toward military aggression would be welcome, Republican standard-bearers are all too happy to sign off on war powers in other ways.