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On Tuesday, May 15, join the American Enterprise Institute, the Center for a New American Security and the New America Foundation to discuss an issue sure to face the next president: U.S. defense spending in light of American grand strategy.
Republican candidates need to find policy approaches that embrace environmental values but are compatible with fiscal responsibility, limited government, free markets, and personal responsibility.
Just as the political air is filled with talk of the inevitability of Barack Obama's re-election -- we are told that the kids at his Chicago headquarters are brimming with confidence -- in come some poll numbers showing him behind.
Losing money is embarrassing. And an embarrassed Jamie Dimon publicly admitted that J.P. Morgan Chase goofed. Three senior executives lost their jobs as a result. But politicians and regulators in Washington are rushing to leverage the bank's misfortune for their own gain.
Even air pollution levels far higher than any we experience in the United States are perfectly safe. Thenation's air does not cause adverse health effects.
The forlorn and increasingly desperate climate campaign achieved a new level of ineptitude last week when what had looked like a minor embarrassment for one of its critics—the Chicago-based Heartland Institute—turned out to be a full-fledged catastrophe for itself. A moment’s reflection on the root of this episode points to why the climate campaign is out of (greenhouse) gas.
Will Japan's catastrophe affect the "nuclear renaissance" in the United States? Four experts weigh in.
The new stealth approach to energy policy being pushed under the guise of a Clean Energy Standard is frankly dishonest.








