Big Dairy Wants Congress To Restore Huge Tariffs on Imported Baby Formula
Unless Congress takes action, those tariffs will return on January 1. And the baby formula shortage hasn't yet passed.
Unless Congress takes action, those tariffs will return on January 1. And the baby formula shortage hasn't yet passed.
Plus: North Carolina strikes down voter ID law, more turmoil at Twitter, and more...
Faced with White House opposition, Sanders withdrew a resolution that would've challenged U.S. involvement in the Yemeni Civil War.
Photos and information you store on iCloud will be safer from hackers, spies, and the government.
Religious Kurds used social media to shut down a rap concert—and they're swinging their weight around politics, too.
"At this point, it is pretty much a fact that Puerto Rico is a colony of the United States," says one observer.
There is much to criticize in Biden's record on immigration issues. But the administration has also made some major improvements.
And their team wanted nothing to do with politics.
The journalist has taken a great deal of flack—from both sides.
Both teams are better than they were in 1998, but the political situation between the two countries has not improved.
The Human Rights Foundation is mobilizing a global band of activists to fight authoritarianism in China, Iran, Russia, and beyond.
Despite Tyler Cowen's argument for the elite theory, the real divisions have much more to do with the New Right's nationalism.
In sharp contrast to the sclerotic traditional refugee admissions program, the new private refugee sponsorship program enables Ukrainians fleeing war and repression to enter the US quickly and relatively easily. As a participating sponsor myself, I have firsthand knowledge of its effectiveness.
State governments already want relief from the "Buy American" mandates included in the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
Poor countries expecting a climate change reparations bonanza will likely be disappointed.
The good news is that does not mean "instant Armageddon" by 2030.
Amid initial concerns about the 'Buy American' electric vehicle tax credit, the European Union is now considering further protectionist retaliation.
The biggest beneficiaries of economic growth are poor people. But the deepest case for economic growth is a moral one.
The bigger problem now is that outmoded regulations stand in the way of deployment.
The Pentagon is seeking to corroborate those reports.
Onerous environmental permitting regulations make rapid renewable energy deployment in the United States a "fantasy."
Privatization can free orbital innovation from ground-bound politics.
Why does the newest branch of the U.S. military need horses?
At COP27, poor countries demand climate change "loss and damage" funding from rich countries.
Accountability, diplomacy, and planning are essential for preventing a forever proxy war.
The Buy American program, used to encourage the buying of American made electric vehicles, not only limits access to EVs but risks a trade war with the E.U.
Antiwar.com's Scott Horton and former Army Lt. Col. Daniel Davis warn about the grave danger of escalating the war in Ukraine
No one is confused about whether Tofurky is turkey.
Joe Biden adopted his predecessor’s protectionism, threatening our peace and prosperity.
Boeing reports that the two new presidential shuttles its building will now be $2 billion over budget.
The question now is whether Bolsonaro’s coalition can remain in place once the man himself is out of power.
Professors Miller and Tucker miss the mark, while Saul Cornell disdains accuracy
Progressives shouldn't be ashamed of being anti-war.
That's in addition to advocating for opponents of the law to be charged with treason.
Science writer Mick West examines alleged UFO sightings. He finds that they almost always have far more obvious explanations.
After 50 days, Liz Truss is out as the U.K. prime minister and Rishi Sunak is in.
Thousands of people from Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka have died while working on enormous infrastructure projects in the lead-up to the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
This time could really be different.
The South Korean government brings the country's greatest cultural export to heel.
There’s nothing patriotic about a law lining the pockets of cargo companies at the expense of consumers.
Plus: Bite mark analysis is a sham, tax code adjusted for inflation, and more...
Newspapers deserve a great deal of credit for the expansion of freedom over the past 200 years. But the media have lost credibility.
Plus: The editors consider Ye and social media, then field a question about the TARP bailouts during the 2008 fiscal crisis.
He's fully licensed, but not in the right state.
If the combat mission is over in the Middle East, Biden should follow—and make permanent—more cautious drone guidelines.
Politicians have turned the unthinkable into a real threat for which you should prepare.
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