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The essays in "The Neoconservative Persuasion" are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who actually liked being called a neoconservative.
The examples of rigidly enforced conformity could fill several volumes, and no amount of criticism from outside the environmental citadel is likely to break though the walls. So, is there any chance that reform will come from within?
Polls indicate that government workers have a much more positive outlook on the direction of the economy than do private sector employees.
The working class in America continues to ping-pong between the parties and is there for the taking by any group that can seriously and directly address its concerns.
The Transatlantic Law Forum, a joint initiative of the American Enterprise Institute and the Council on Public Policy, will explore the institutional and legal dimensions of the financial crisis at its 2010 annual conference.
In The Politically Correct University: Problems, Scope, and Reforms,, editors Robert Maranto, Richard E. Redding, and Frederick M. Hess, along with nineteen other scholars and practitioners, examine how the politically correct imperative to promote "diversity"--of race, ethnicity, and gender, but not of ideas--has diverted higher education from its true purposes.
The future of Latin America--and its progressive lurch to the Left--rests in its voters' hands.
President Bush, who values democracy and economic freedom, will find in India's experience a confirmation of the fundamental soundness of this approach to development.



