Search Results
-
FILTER BY DATEAll Time
-
-
FILTER BY RELEVANCEMost Relevant
-
-
FILTER BY CONTENT TYPEAll Content Types
-
For decades, intellectual politics and policy debates in the United States have been distorted by a strange residue of liberalism, reminding us of the movement's long dominance over U.S. politics. Many liberal and progressive thinkers assume, usually implicitly, that they alone have a monopoly on knowledge about cause-and-effect relationships in...
Obama's presidency is gravely wounding America and its friends. His response to virtually every significant threat or crisis has either complicated or worsened the problem, or, at best, left it essentially no closer to resolution.
Political essayist Charles Krauthammer will receive the Irving Kristol Award and deliver a lecture on February 10, 2004 in Washington, D.C.
By helping India become a major world power, the administration is showing the global seriousness of the Bush Doctrine.
Muravchik offers a unique formula for reforming the UN: boost its humanitarian work while stripping it of the pretensions of world government.
For almost a third of a century, the Islamic Republic of Iran has confounded American presidents. It has taken hostages, conducted terrorism, undermined the Middle East peace process, and worked unrelentingly to become a nuclear power and develop missiles with global reach.
Review of Surprise, Security and the American Experience by John Lewis Gaddis.
Catholic theologian Michael Novak explains why he believes his Holiness is wrong.






