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The one thing on which our political leaders seem to agree is the need for corporate tax reform. But amid all of the promising rhetoric there is significant cause for concern. Many proposals, particularly those of Messrs. Obama and Santorum, seem to have unlearned many of the lessons of modern economics.
Although the Schumer-Lee plan deserves credit for seeking to promote international capital flows and labor mobility, it would neither make a measurable dent in the housing sector's backlog nor fix a broken immigration system that hampers our economy's long-run prospects.
Next month's thirty-seven gubernatorial elections are not looking promising for the Obama Democrats.
A people that respond with such intensity to Susan Boyle's story must still possess the sentiments that have been the source of American greatness.
While the presidential candidates' policy positions are evolving, it isreasonable to hope that they can agree on key steps to create a firebreak for our financial crisis.
Joshua Muravchik reviews After Bush: The Case for Continuity in American Foreign Policy by Timothy J. Lynch and Robert S. Singh.
Amazingly, an era of energy abundance is upon us, unless politicians and environmentalists get their way.






