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Joshua Muravchik responds to letters to the editor in the most recent issue of Foreign Policy.
Ifdrug activistsare successful in degrading patent rights, many lives will be lost.
In this tumultuous political year, the latest sharp surprises come from the far reaches of the Anglosphere--Alaska and Australia--as voters defied expectations.
An unexpected Swedish victory is just the latest in an unprecedented run of success worldwide for fiscally conservative parties, beginning after the Greek debt crisis in April, which should sound both optimistic and cautionary notes for GOP leaders.
The longer-term threat is that in the face having their drugs effectively confiscated, Abbott will cut back on research and development of drugs whose main markets are in developing countries.
While the United States continues to resolve the ambiguities in the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the European Union has embraced a new regulatory framework for telecommunications that relies to a greater extent on antitrust principles. Participants at this conference will analyze the growing use, in both the United States and...
As memory of past tragedies fade, many Australians question their participation in the war on terror. Whereas three years ago, the Australian mission in Afghanistan was relatively popular, polls now show almost two-thirds of Australians want their troops withdrawn from Afghanistan.
Only those who want fewer HIV drugs can welcome Brazil's actions; everyone else should be worried.




