The refreshing libertarianism of New Hampshire
‘Live Free or Die’ is the state motto, popularized by John Stark, the state’s most famous general in the War of Independence
‘Live Free or Die’ is the state motto, popularized by John Stark, the state’s most famous general in the War of Independence
The liberals will argue that populist parties play to the ‘baser instincts’ of the electorate, tapping into their fears
In an atomized, fractured social landscape, what matters is how much individuals can get away with
Students are expected to direct not only what they are taught, and how, but how they are rewarded for it too
We are putting on a collective spectacle of self-destruction, degeneracy and spiritual vapidity
His ambitious goal is to create an American version of WeChat
Reuters published a story on presidents, Supreme Court judges, governors and members of Congress that have ancestors who owned slaves
‘We are plunging headlong into danger at an unknown pace’
Britain would almost certainly have been better served had Trump stayed in office
The ideal of a ‘mixed constitution’ was replaced by the creation of an entrenched progress-oriented liberal elite
The role of secretary-general should not be a prize handed out to the least offensive candidate
The president’s frank remark was a refreshingly honest observation
The opinion of the majority of historians prior to 2010 or so is closer to the truth
In Scranton, Biden was steeped in the exaggerated but dated folklore of Irish grudge
Espionage is a very ordinary occurrence in international politics
The Biden administration botches relations with Russia while its experts tell each other flattering fictions
It’s climate change, innit? No sooner had Hurricane Ida smashed into the coast of Louisiana with winds of around 150 mph than the usual claims began to be made, the ones we get every time a hurricane makes landfall in the US: that it has been caused in part by man-made climate change. Climate models have tended to predict that tropical storms will become stronger as warmer seas lead to more energy being absorbed by the storms. Trouble is, observational evidence does not suggest that this has happened — at least not yet. While records of storms exist since 1851 they cannot be taken to be complete records A Princeton University