by Paul Rosenzweig | Jan 24, 2003 | Guns, POLITICS
The language of the Second Amendment seems straightforward: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” Yet the debate rages on: Does each American... by Evan Madianos | Jan 24, 2003 | POLITICS
An acute disruption in vital health care services in Pennsylvania may have been prevented for now by Gov.-elect Ed Rendell’s and Gov. Mark Schweiker’s “stop-gap” economic intervention. However, the recent threats issued to all the state’s... by John Bragg | Jan 24, 2003 | Foreign Policy
The objective of US policy must be the destruction of the nuclear capability of the North.
by Alan Luber | Jan 23, 2003 | POLITICS
In chapter 4 of my book, PC Fear Factor, I provide a step-by-step process for transitioning from your old computer to a new computer. The process includes all of the steps required to migrate your data from your old machine to your new, and how to install all of your... by Daniel J Mitchell | Jan 23, 2003 | POLITICS
President Bush’s critics reacted in predictably uniform fashion to his latest economic proposal: Playing the class-warfare card.Good luck making that charge stick. America isn’t France. The politics of hate-and-envy doesn’t resonate here like it does... by Leonard Peikoff | Jan 23, 2003 | Abortion, Women's Rights
Thirty years after Roe V. Wade, no one defends the right to abortion in fundamental, moral terms, which is why the pro-abortion rights forces are on the defensive. Abortion-rights advocates should not cede the terms “pro-life” and “right to... by Robert W Tracinski | Jan 22, 2003 | Middle East & Israel, POLITICS
The headline of an Associated Press report from Tuesday declares, “Gaps Appear to Widen over Iraq within UN Security Council.” The wording is, perhaps unintentionally, precise: the gaps only appear to be widening. The report informs us — to no... by Don Luskin | Jan 22, 2003 | POLITICS
In science, you start with a hypothesis. Then you conduct an experiment to see if your hypothesis is true. If the experiment proves the hypothesis wrong, you throw it out and come up with a new hypothesis based on what you’ve learned. I guess economics must not... by Daniel Pipes | Jan 21, 2003 | Europe, POLITICS
Things looked so clear in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, when the forces of civilization stood on one side and the barbarians on the other. The very evening after the attack, President Bush announced that “America and our friends and allies join with all those...