Give Yahya Sinwar the Eichmann Treatment
Two top Palestinian commanders—Hezbollah’s Wissam Hassan Al-Tawil and Hamas’s Saleh al-Arouri—were both killed over the past two weeks in suspected Israeli airstrikes. Hamas’s figurehead and the suspected mastermind of the Oct. 7 attack, Yahya Sinwar, is still at large, but it’s fair to assume he is high on Israel’s list of targets. After the horrific […]
The Voters Finally Get Their Say
Each party seems set to make a big mistake, but a Trump-Biden rematch isn’t yet inevitable. Source link
Gavin Newsom Objects—to Us – WSJ
These columns caught Gavin Newsom’s attention this week, we’re delighted to say. The California Governor is upset that we reported on the wealth-tax proposal in the state Assembly because Mr. Newsom says he doesn’t support such a tax. Mr. Newsom on Wednesday presented his budget for the coming year, including ideas to close a $68 […]
Anthony Fauci Fesses Up – WSJ
Anthony Fauci has never struggled to speak his mind. But now that he has left government, he is finally speaking at least some of the truth about government policies and Covid. For instance, the six-feet rule for social distancing “sort of just appeared” without a solid scientific basis. That’s one of the admissions that Members […]
The New Segregation on Campus
UCLA’s medical school divides students by race to teach ‘antiracism.’ Source link
Genocide Gets Political at the U.N.
The United Nations has done little while Russia has slaughtered innocent Ukrainians, but suddenly the body has a cause it can get behind—charging Israel with genocide for the crime of self-defense. The U.N.’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) began hearings Thursday on South Africa’s charge that the Jewish state is committing genocide in its war […]
Trump vs. the Non-RINOs
DeSantis and Haley are both products of the Republican Party he transformed. Source link
How 'Evangelical' Are Iowa's Evangelicals?
The adulteration of a theological term into a secular political and demographic label. Source link
Superstar Romances, Then and Now
In the 1950s, it was DiMaggio and Monroe. Today, it’s Kelce and Swift. Source link
A Fiscal Commission on the National Debt? Good Luck With That
As Congress begins a new session, the price of government expansion during the pandemic is coming into sharper focus. The national debt as a percentage of gross domestic product will soon surpass records set in World War II, and bipartisan support is rising in both the House and Senate for another fiscal commission to tackle […]