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Today is Awards Day. Our first award is for the Public Official Who Has Most Blatantly Violated His or Her Oath of Office.
For several years now, President Obama and his allies in the environmental movement have promised to usher in a green economy that will create millions of new green jobs that “can’t be outsourced.”
The Nobel Peace Prize is the world’s most prestigious award, as Jay Nordlinger argues in this erudite and insightful history. He has written not only the go-to reference book for the prize and its laureates but also an important philosophical reflection on the nature of “peace” in modern times.
The Supreme Court's decision in Exxon Shipping v. Baker highlights the need for legislative reform of arbitrary punitive damage awards.
The overwhelming success of the Mega Millions enterprise makes it an irresistible target for something more — a way to transform American elections and along the way reduce our deep political dysfunction.
John R. Bolton's acceptance speech for a 2007 Bradley Prize.
History offers many lessons, and surely one is about the ties that bind us.
Fear of litigation has a dramatically negative effect on costs, productivity and patient care.




