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  • January 11, 2022
    Responsible Statecraft
    China Has Been a Failure at Hegemony, So Let’s Just Chill
    Many in the U.S. foreign policy establishment and elsewhere are sounding an alarm over concerns that, as China develops, it will become the dominant power in its region, a “hegemon” that will have too much “influence” there and do …
    By John Mueller
  • January 11, 2022
    Antiwar.com
    US Officials in Glass Houses Shouldn't Throw Stones
    US Officials in Glass Houses Shouldn’t Throw Stones
    … the part of a notoriously volatile US president. Compelling Iraq to continue hosting US forces was a high‐​priority administration policy. Senior officials from the Treasury Department and other agencies began drafting specific sanctions that could be imposed. Washington explicitly …
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
  • January 10, 2022
    National Interest (Online)
    North Korea Starts the New Year With a Missile Test
    North Korea Starts the New Year With a Missile Test
    … to both chart an autarkic course and resist foreign influences, especially from South Korea. He may have made a permanent policy change, moving back toward the dismal worlds of his father and grandfather, who accepted domestic poverty and dependence on …
    By Doug Bandow
  • January 7, 2022
    Blog
    What Do Cryptocurrencies Mean for Liberty?
    What Do Cryptocurrencies Mean for Liberty?
    No two cryptocurrencies are created equal. However, in principle, cryptocurrencies offer the potential to enhance liberty across the world.
    By Nicholas Anthony
  • January 3, 2022
    Ink Stick Media
    Spending toward Strategic Overreach
    Spending toward Strategic Overreach
    Unless legislators engage in serious strategic self-reflection, future NDAAs will continue to authorize funding to compete against every possible threat, real and imagined, without clear priorities.
    By Jordan Cohen, Eric Gomez, and Brandon Valeriano
  • January 3, 2022
    National Interest (Online)
    North Korea's Priority May Be Food over Nukes
    North Korea’s Priority May Be Food over Nukes
    With Pyongyang and Washington preoccupied with domestic problems, both sides might end up playing an updated version of “strategic patience.”
    By Doug Bandow
  • December 31, 2021
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Democrats Denying Reality on Inflation
    Democrats Denying Reality on Inflation
    Prominent Democrats have either denied the reality of inflation or prescribed the wrong solution. Norbert Michel describes what might come next on the inflation front.
    Featuring Norbert Michel and Caleb O. Brown
  • December 30, 2021
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Trade Is Voluntary Exchange for Mutual Benefit
    Trade Is Voluntary Exchange for Mutual Benefit
    It’s easy to imagine trade is entire countries making big decisions. As Scott Lincicome and Alex Nowrasteh explain, it’s individuals making millions of small decisions to benefit themselves through voluntary exchange. Curtailing trade violates that liberty. They spoke at the 2021 Cato Club event.
    Featuring Alex Nowrasteh, Scott Lincicome, and Caleb O. Brown
  • December 29, 2021
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Defending Startups and Their Angel Investors
    Defending Startups and Their Angel Investors
    Startups need capital to compete with bigger companies, and taxes on capital gains can stem the flow of angel investment. Chris Edwards makes his case for angel investors.
    Featuring Chris Edwards and Caleb O. Brown
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