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As Obama's record emerges his motivating principle seems rooted in an analysis that America has too often been on the side of the bad guys.
The Equal Rights Amendment would hand radical feminist groups a powerful weapon to wage war on what they view as "the gender system."
With slowing economic growth, a publicly feuding cabinet, and a series of corruption scandals that have paralyzed governance, you might think the last thing India needs is a foreign policy mishap. But there's no other way to characterize New Delhi's full-throated support for Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas's dangerous grandstanding at the United Nations in pursuit of statehood.
Stuart A. Cohen's work stands the test of time and provides a handy reference for what remains an understudied period.
This book examines growth, poverty, employment, taxes, and deficits; and discusses therole of presidents, their advisers, and economistsin the formation of economic policy.
With all the recent talk in France and Germany about creating an industrial policy to promote national champions, I cannot help feeling that I am in a time warp. I have to pinch myself to make sure that I am not back in the 1960s, 1970s or 1980s. Or even under the mercantilist regime of Jean Baptiste Colbert in King Louis XIV's France.
Obama has based his policy toward Iran on the hope that its leaders would see the problem as he does--projection--and was apparently discounting contrary evidence like the Qom facility--cognitive dissonance.
It isworth focusing again on relationship between North Korea and the outside world.






