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  • November 29, 2023
    The Dispatch
    Eating Better (a Lot Better) Than Kings
    Eating Better (a Lot Better) Than Kings
    … increasing the demand for pineapple here—a great example, as Bagley and I also document in our essay, of how migration fuels food globalization.  Today, dishes featuring pineapples, like “salsa de piña picante” from Mexico, “pineapple lumps” from New Zealand …
    By Scott Lincicome
  • September 26, 2023
    Blog
    Congress Should Restrain 'Emergency Spending'
    Congress Should Restrain ‘Emergency Spending’
    … However, about $2 billion comes from a transfer in previously allocated emergency budget authority from “United States emergency refugee and migration” to “Enduring Welcome Administration and Support”—an Afghanistan refugee program. The net emergency budget authority for refugee and migration
    By Romina Boccia and Dominik Lett
  • July 6, 2023
    The Dispatch
    What Most People Don't Understand about U.S.-China 'Decoupling'
    What Most People Don’t Understand about U.S.-China ‘Decoupling’
    A “hard decoupling” of the U.S. and Chinese economies would impose massive costs upon the global economy, with the biggest pain felt not by “globalist elites” or multinational corporations but by “low‐​income countries and less well‐​off consumers in advanced economies.”
    By Scott Lincicome
  • November 29, 2022
    White Paper
    Cops Practicing Medicine
    Cops Practicing Medicine
    Government and law enforcement increasingly surveil and influence the way doctors treat pain, psychoactive substance use, and substance use disorder.
    By Jeffrey A. Singer and Trevor Burrus
  • April 27, 2023
    UnHerd
    How Europe Can Defend Itself
    How Europe Can Defend Itself
    The United States will be increasingly unable and unwilling to do the heavy lifting as Europe’s security provider.
    By Patrick Porter
  • December 5, 2022
    New Lines Magazine
    The Dubious Roots of Religious Police in Islam
    The Dubious Roots of Religious Police in Islam
    The Islamic concept of ‘commanding the right and forbidding the wrong’ is applied across the Muslim world to curtail personal liberties and police morality, but this interpretation is questionable.
    By Mustafa Akyol
  • November 3, 2022
    Ink Stick Media
    Controlling US Arms, Not Aid, to Yemen
    Controlling US Arms, Not Aid, to Yemen
    Beyond preventing future hostilities, the United States owes Yemen tools to relieve their suffering.
    By Jordan Cohen and Jonathan Ellis Allen
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