Corporate Socialism? Bill Barr's Suggestion That the U.S. Should Buy Nokia or Ericsson To Counter China Is a Terrible Idea.
If the only way to beat China is to become like China, then we've already lost.
If the only way to beat China is to become like China, then we've already lost.
And whether it balances at all depends on some creative accounting. Meanwhile, it proposes $2 billion in new spending on the border wall.
Plus: Iowa updates, Ancestry.com tells cops to buzz off, and more...
American manufacturing has been in a recession for the past year.
The president likes things big, so that apparently applies to government budgets too.
The framers of the Constitution were quite right that wars should be difficult to start and easy to end.
Plus: 50 troops were injured in Iran attack, Bloomberg is beating Buttigieg, and more...
Civilian deaths are also on the rise, and it's increasingly obvious that there is no clear strategy for the U.S. to "win" its longest military conflict.
Plus: Kobe Bryant, school choice week, John Bolton's book, a FOSTA ruling, and more...
Plus: China takes campus free speech issues to a new level, Bloomberg wants to take away your vape, and more...
The Trump administration is trying to make it harder for pregnant women to enter the country as tourists since they might give birth while here.
Republicans might rue that mistake when Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders inherits Trump's beefed-up trade authority.
Few people are buying the U.S. government's unconvincing explanations about "imminent" threats.
Unless the tariffs are lifted, the "Phase One" trade deal might not accomplish much beyond empowering China's communist regime to tighten its grip on free markets.
The Trump administration's "phase one" deal with China will keep many tariffs in place, but Democrats don't seem to have the guts to stand up for freer trade.
Plus: the Supreme Court's latest religious freedom case, a White House weather report, FDA follies, Vermin Supreme wins one, and more...
Plus: Tarriffs are killing U.S. wine, Vermont bill would ban cell phones for kids, and more...
Robert Wetherbee says steel tariffs might force his business to shutter. But instead of asking for the tariffs to be lifted, he wants special treatment.
But what has the saber-rattling of the past week accomplished for the United States?
Plus: member of Congress say #NoWarWithIran, a Ukrainian plane crashed in Tehran, and more...
"These U.S. tariffs have been completely passed on to U.S. firms and consumers," report economists from Princeton, Columbia, and the Federal Reserve.
Plus: More charges against Harvey Weinstein, Puerto Rico without power, and more...
The vice president says assassinated Iranian general Qasem Soleimani was involved in the September 11 plot. That's as true as when Republicans said Saddam Hussein was.
Plus: the never-quite-there Klobuchar Moment, how Fox News learned to love the deep state, and more...
Reports now suggest that Trump took the unprecedented step of killing a foreign leader based on thin evidence of a threat and with an eye toward domestic politics.
The constitutional role of Congress is not to cheerlead a major escalation of a nearly 17-year-old conflict. It's to consider the best interest of the American people.
Plus: State Department tells Americans to leave Iraq, the return of freedom fries?, and more...
Several dozen protesters tried to storm the American embassy in Baghdad in retaliation for U.S. airstrikes in the country over the weekend.
That should be fairly obvious to anyone who has been following the news, but a new report from the Federal Reserve provides the empirical evidence.
The problem, as always, is that voters are likely to say they want Congress to balance the budget, but are less likely to back any specific ideas for doing so.
Plus: the FISA court's FBI rebuke, lawsuit challenges California's AB5, and more...
Despite a change in administrations, U.S. foreign policy in the 2010s stayed its wasteful, destructive course.
Will Republicans back a North American trade deal that prioritizes the interests of Democrats, labor unions, and protectionists?
This deal offers minimal relief for Americans, and it doesn't seem to address the thorniest issues between the two countries.
Plus: the foundations bankrolling bad tech policy, they is the word of the year, and more...
Trump, big labor, and America's reputation as a trading partner emerge as winners, but free trade takes the loss in the USMCA.
Plus: corruption, corruption, runaway spending, and more corruption...
Deadlines near for the NAFTA rewrite and the China negotiations.
This is why we can't have serious conversations about government spending.
No number of NATO summits will re-energize an alliance against an enemy that went out of business nearly 30 years ago.
The set of tariffs scheduled for December 15 will hit a wide range of consumer goods from children's toys to laptops, gaming consoles, and other home electronics. They will be costly and ineffective..
Trump has authorized up to $16 billion in bailout spending this year, on top of $12 billion spent in 2018.
Plus: another half-truth from Elizabeth Warren, Rick Perry calls Trump "the chosen one," and more...
Plus: Sondland worked "on Ukraine matters at the express direction of" Trump, why hospital prices are so screwy, D.C. gets pushback for ditching sex work bill, and more...
Rep. Justin Amash and some progressive lawmakers are trying to block it, but most Democrats seem happy to hand more spying powers to a president they are investigating for abusing his power.
Plus: how Hyperloop could reshape the Midwest, crowdfunding social media, the billionaires behind Democratic candidates, and more...
Plus: Joe Biden still thinks weed might be a "gateway drug," D.C. sex work decriminalization bill won't get a vote, and more...
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