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The world is becoming increasingly scary at the very time that the military will be facing 20% reductions. With each passing day, the world closes in; with each passing day, our ability to manage that world degrades.
If Washington is going to change America’s contract with those who serve that if they fight, they’ll have the very best to win, shouldn’t they first tell those in uniform?
No one with a heart or with a brain can dispute that total cancellation of the debt of the world's poorest nations is a given in our collective progress toward global economic balance.
The Marshall Plan's role in the economic recovery of Europe after World War II is often invoked as indisputable proof that foreign aid works. In 2005, while serving as chancellor of the exchequer, British prime minister Gordon Brown called for "a new deal between developed and developing countries as bold...
In his new book, Global Financial Warriors: The Untold Story of International Finance in the Post-9/11 World (W. W. Norton, January 2007), John Taylor recounts his experiences on the financial frontlines as under secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs from 2001 to 2005. During his tenure at the Treasury,...
Dick Armey is noticeably non-specific in discussing what might be cut from Pentagon budgets. This amounts to a confession of ignorance in national defense matters.
Europeans are standing up for their national identities at the risk of being labeled "extremists" by the Eurocrats.
If this so-called "Super Committee" falls short—or if the required deficit reduction legislation is not enacted by January 15, 2012—then the Pentagon's long-term budget will suffer the brunt of the consequences.






