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Republicans are being advised to move to the center, but they should instead run against the center--that is, centralized government institutions being created and strengthened every day.
Spreading pork, opposing rational cost-benefit analysis, and creating unionized federal employeeswill notmake the United States safer.
Policymakers should start doing the analysis needed and making trade-offs as to where we should focus our limited security resources.
Democrats want to spend more taxpayer money, but not in ways that will make the United States more secure.
A new business model for foreign aid is the main hope--perhaps the only hope--for fixing a broken system.
By eliminating the deductibility of interest, accelerating depreciation schedules, and reducing the corporate tax rate, we can reduce the effective marginal tax rate and improve U.S. competitiveness.
U.S. foreign aid needs a new business model that fits the realities of today's global economic picture.
Banking instability and regulation in the United States suggests the need to reevaluate views of the inherent instability of banking systems and the value of deposit insurance.



