Curt Mills: Should America Police the World?
Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, talks U.S. foreign policy on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Curt Mills, executive director of The American Conservative, talks U.S. foreign policy on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Plus: Aid for Ukraine, remote learning for 5-year-olds, intermittent fasting for Palestine, and more...
Plus: A listener asks if the state of Oregon’s policy on drug decriminalization should be viewed as a success.
Survey finds growing acceptance of civilian firearms among the country’s population.
Good that sanity prevailed on this issue.
If the absurd decision stands, she could potentially be deported back to Russia, where she faces an 8-year prison sentence.
They should take this wise and just step sooner rather than later.
Congressman Thomas Massie discusses his "no" votes on foreign aid, COVID-19 relief, and labeling anti-Zionism antisemitism on episode two of Just Asking Questions.
The analogy between Russia's invasion of Ukraine and illegal migration to the US is nonsensical. And many of the GOP's demands are intended to make legal migration more difficult, a policy likely to actually increase the illegal kind.
Plus: University reckoning, climate-grief vasectomies, Chinese garlic, and more...
The $300 billion in frozen Russian state assets in Western nations could fund a large part of Ukraine's defense.
Americans are likely to be blamed no matter what happens.
Admitting students to America as refugees provides resettlement in America, overcoming the need for an F-1 visa and the challenge of travel documents.
The justifications for backing Israel's struggle also apply in spades to Ukraine's.
Plus: Rupert Murdoch retires, Ibram X. Kendi blew through millions of dollars, and more…
Plus: Separating child poverty facts from fiction, EU will ban payments for sperm and blood, and more...
Plus: A listener asks for the editors’ advice on how to spend his money.
The case was filed by 20 red states seeking to dismantle the CNVH program extending the successful Uniting for Ukraine policy to migrants fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Haiti.
The journalist and podcast host on foreign policy, democracy, and habitual law breaking by the NSA, CIA, and FBI
Legislators abuse the emergency label to push through spending that would otherwise violate budget constraints.
Only Vivek Ramaswamy and Gov. Ron DeSantis said they wouldn't support additional aid to Ukraine. But both argued we should be more militarily engaged against China and Mexico.
This measure will enable Ukrainians in the US to live and work here legally until April 19, 2025. It's a step in the right direction, but Congress still needs to pass an adjustment act giving them permanent residency.
Should the U.S. continue to bankroll the counteroffensive?
The program extends the successful Uniting for Ukraine policy to migrants fleeing Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Haiti.
Washington is doing a poor job of monitoring whether the weapons it sends to Ukraine are ending up in the right hands.
The chance of open U.S.-Russia conflict really would increase if Ukraine were admitted to NATO.
Progressive Democrats' opposition to sending cluster bombs to Ukraine is welcome. Their arguments apply to much of the military aid the U.S. is sending the country.
NATO could increase its "ready" troops from 40,000 to 300,000. That isn't certain to make us safer.
Participants included Prof. Adam Cox (NYU), David Bier (Cato), Kit Taintor (Welcome.US), and myself.
Feudal-style squabbling with the control of nuclear weapons at stake.
A leading US expert on Russia advocates outreach to Putin's Russian opponents and encouraging emigration from Russia. The best way to encourage Russians to leave is to allow more of them to come to the West.
Plus: Florida drag law ruled unconstitutional, Meta cancels Canadian news posts, and more...
The definition excludes a vast range of people fleeing horrific violence and oppression.
The bill would grant permanent residency rights to many thousands of Ukrainians who have entered the US since 2014. But its exact scope is unclear.
The bipartisan legislation would grant permanent residency and work rights to some 400,000 refugees from Venezuela's brutal socialist dictatorship.
There’s no neat and clean way to fight a war, even for victims of aggression.
Participants include Prof. Adam Cox (NYU), David Bier (Cato), Kit Taintor (Welcome.US), and myself.
Projections of huge savings are making the rounds. Nothing could be further from the truth.
A new study by the conservative Manhattan Institute concludes that the expansion of private sponsorship parole to migrants from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti and Venezuela has reduced illegal migration across the southern border by about 98,000 per month.
The Pentagon’s “accounting error” will allow President Joe Biden to send an extra $3 billion in military aid to Ukraine without congressional approval. Was this deliberate?
He's not wrong about that.
Enjoy a special video episode recorded live from New York City’s illustrious Comedy Cellar at the Village Underground.
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.
Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.
This modal will close in 10