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The Supreme Court will hear a case on Monday that has the potential to strike a ferocious blow for, or against, religious liberty on university campuses.
Although the Telecommunications Act of 1996 removed artificial regulatory distinctions, the administrative rulemakings have focused on the traditional wireline access network.
The situation with General McChrystal has shifted the spotlight to President Obama's highly conditional commitment to Afghanistan, forcing Obama to answer whether he can adapt to win the war.
Howarth doesn’t have to convince anyone he’s right to devastate New York’s budding shale industry and put tens of thousands of jobs into question. He wins if he muddies the waters enough to give cautious Albany bureaucrats reason to stall.
The federal government is a powerful entity, but try as it might it cannot repeal the laws of supply and demand. So don’t blame the drug makers or the banks; blame the politicians in Washington and their inability to see that price "controls" can’t control the larger market.
It is said to be sports' doomsday scenario: a new generation of chemically enhanced or bioengineered athletes transformed from also-rans into world champions. We are entering an age often referred to as posthumanist, and sport is its leading edge. Elite athletes regularly remake their bodies in an effort to stretch...
AEI's Christina Hoff Sommers is concerned by attempts to transform academic science with feminist dogma, which would reduce American competitiveness.
Gender bias has been a hot button topic of discrimination for many years, but after analyzing 20 years of data, two Cornell professors have concluded that, in academic science, women are treated just as well as men.





