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A big government president, Obama is learning, needs to be a war president first.
As the housing market struggles to keep pace with economic recovery elsewhere, homeowners would love to have a crystal ball. Absent that, however, they have AEI resident fellow Edward Pinto, one of seven panelists to be awarded with Zillow and Pulsenomics' Crystal Ball Award.
Why can't our opponents be reasonable? In his new book, “The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion,” social psychologist Jonathan Haidt explores the origins of morality in our rapid and automatic moral intuitions.
What matters for China is not whether Westerners believe the system is cracking. The question is: How do the Chinese view their own system?
While Bo's story is about power, it should not obscure the fact that there is an ideological struggle going on inside China.
Governor Nikki Haley of South Carolina will discuss the complicated relationship between the federal government and the states and her own experiences fighting government regulation.
The policy instruments that the Federal Reserve uses to maintain balanced growth are far better suited to adjusting demand growth than to adjusting supply growth.
As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton heads to China this week for yearly strategic consultations, a daring bid for political asylum has highlighted the seething dissent beneath China’s surface stability.








