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With the Supreme Court taking up Arizona’s “show me your papers” immigration law, we’re once again thrust into a useful debate over the role of the government and the obligations of the citizen — and non-citizen. Rather than come at it from the usual angle, I thought I’d try something...
So, David Sanger had a piece in the NYT last weekend wondering whether there’s a “Romney doctrine.” Of course, he wasn’t really wondering; he knew from the get go what he thought. And luckily for Sanger, he had plenty of Romney advisers to help along his theory.
A new report by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) argues that one of the greatest mistakes the United States can make is to imagine that Iranian activities in a given arena--the nuclear program, for example--are isolated from Iranian undertakings in another. The report examines those other areas
Elizabeth Warren is again at the center of a political controversy. Despite her insistence that she is part Cherokee, based upon “family lore” and her observation that some in her family had “high cheekbones like all the Indians do,” she has failed to produce any concrete evidence to substantiate her claim.
Under the banner of the American Educational Research Association, roughly 20,000 researchers will convene in Vancouver to report on research that can help fuel student learning and improve schools. If only they knew what wasn't enough.
Brookings Papers on Education Policy provides the latest thinking from nationally recognized experts on policy issues affecting grades K-12.
As the Supreme Court hears a challenge to Arizona's immigration law today, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) scholars are available for interviews.
Where interpretation of history is concerned, President George W. Bush backs the views of the Baltic states: the Soviet Union occupied Eastern Europe rather than liberating it. The Baltic Times published excerpts from Bush's letter to Latvian President Vajra Vike-Freiberge, where he emphasizes that the end of World War II meant liberation only for Western Europe. "In Central and Eastern Europe the war meant Soviet occupation and the annexation of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania and installation of the communist regime," Bush wrote.







