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Three weeks out from the New Hampshire primary and voters in the Granite State don't seem to have settled firmly on one of the Republican presidential candidates.
Brad Wilcox and Kathryn Sharpe of the University of Virginia have taken a fascinating fresh look at sectors of the economy most influenced by marriage and fertility.
A candidate's strengths can also be his weaknesses. Take the case of Rick Santorum.
Japanese are disappearing in slow motion and so far, there is no rescue plan.
Obama, who fancies himself a scholar of the Constitution, never said a peep about the Defense of Marriage Act being unconstitutional until this week. Why the change of heart?
Analyzes tax penalties for marriage.
Here are a couple of things to keep in mind about Newt Gingrich, as he leads in polls for the Republican presidential nomination nationally and in Iowa and South Carolina and may be threatening Mitt Romney's lead in New Hampshire. One is that he is an autodidact. A second is that he has incredible perseverance.
The victory of feminism allows women like Elizabeth Gilbert to shape their own destinies. But there is a price for this victory: a solipsism so complete that Western women have lost the ability to empathize with women not only in the Islamic world, but also in China, India and other countries.









