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Liberals often speak in seemingly harmless cliches that they hope will penetrate our mental defenses. Here are some of the most egregious examples.
The bard boom comes to the AEI conference room, as "Movers and Shakespeares" pulls contemporary lessons from Shakespeare’s Henry V. Recently featured in the Economist, People, and Fortune magazines, "Movers and Shakespeares" has conducted day-long seminars for Wharton and Harvard alumni and MBA students, top brass of the...
Going with the flow is not necessarily the best policy.
If we are left with English departments that do not need Shakespeare, then who needs English departments?
Will consumer-oriented health companies make doctors obsolete?
Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin (1799-1837) was Russia's greatest poet--its Shakespeare, its Dante. The author of Evgeny Onegin, Boris Godunov, The Bronze Horseman, and innumerable other classics, Pushkin is credited with creating modern literary Russian, and his influence is impossible to overstate. To be able to read and appreciate Pushkin is indispensable...
Public radio and television are defensible to the extent that they serve the public good by enriching the arts. NPR and PBS, however, wandered far from this mission.
The term liquidity can be ambiguous and is better understood as a figure of speech.




