Skip to main content
60,177 results found
Sort By:
Best Match | Newest
  • January 25, 2019
    Blog
    Federal Subsidies Infiltrate Everything
    Citizens should know how much local government services cost, and they should be willing to pay for those local services they really need.  
    By Chris Edwards
  • January 25, 2019
    Blog
    Rebuke Russian Meddling in Venezuela
    … s Venezuela is no more a genuine democracy than is Putin’s Russia or Erdogan’s Turkey. Nevertheless, U.S. policy is skating close to the line of improper behavior. A decision to extend diplomatic recognition should be based on …
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
  • January 25, 2019
    Blog
    DEFENSE DOWNLOAD: Week of 1/24/19
    … world of defense politics every week. The three‐​to‐​five trending stories will vary depending on the news cycle, what policymakers are talking about, and will pull from all sides of the political spectrum. If you would like to receive …
    By Caroline Dorminey
  • January 24, 2019
    Blog
    Oregon O-Zone Oops!
    Policymakers often enact programs for the needy but the benefits go mainly to businesses and special interests. The benefits of the low‐​income housing tax credit are siphoned off by the finance industry. The earned income tax credit pushes down …
    By Chris Edwards
  • January 24, 2019
    American Conservative
    Today’s NATO Mission Is to Preserve Itself
    … sense on this issue. He frequently irritates even his friends. But that doesn’t mean he’s incorrect. Forget foreign policy for a moment. Uncle Sam is broke. The Republicans opened the Treasury’s doors by simultaneously upping spending and …
    By Doug Bandow
  • January 23, 2019
    National Interest (Online)
    The Second Trump-Kim Summit: The Devil Is in the Details
    If Trump can use the second summit with Kim to move away from sweeping statements of denuclearization and focus on narrowly-defined issues, he could break the current impasse and open the door to significant progress.
    By Eric Gomez
  • January 22, 2019
    Blog
    Winner and Loser States from Centralized Government
    American government has become larger and much more centralized. That centralization has made winners and losers among the states as vast flows of taxpayer cash pour into Washington and are then dispersed through more than 2,200 federal spending programs.
    By Chris Edwards
  • January 22, 2019
    National Interest (Online)
    Get Ready for North Korea’s Next Summit Showdown
    No one in Washington other than the president appears to believe there is much chance that the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea intends to disarm, but the show must go on.
    By Doug Bandow
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
27282930123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930311234567