It’s no secret that these are bad times for most Jews in the diaspora. Anti-Semitism across the West has reached a virulence not seen since the 1930s. A clear danger should lead to greater solidarity, ...
It’s 3 a.m. in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district, and an all-night, drug-fueled party has been raging for hours. The sidewalks are littered with trash and human feces. Addicts huddle in the alleys, ...
A man of sturdy temperament, silver tongue, and swarthy countenance, Richard Francis Burton—born in Torquay in 1821—was better equipped than most Englishmen for undercover travel in Arabia. Laid low ...
The Lone Star State is using corporate law reform to attract business, but Delaware’s legal advantages still make a full ...
I’ve been a small landlord in New York for over a decade. I know my tenants by name, and until recently I operated the way most small landlords I know operate, with flexibility, discretion, and a ...
Jim “Fergie” Chambers, the Communist millionaire and heir to the Cox media fortune, has long bankrolled one of the nation’s ...
Over the past decade, the Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that the First Amendment prohibits excluding religious institutions from public benefit programs. Yet some states have resisted this clear ...
Slavery was neither central to America’s founding nor the primary source of the country’s subsequent prosperity. Yet both ...
A recently revised estimate from the Congressional Budget Office finds 1.5 million fewer illegal immigrants in the country than would have been the case had Biden’s policies continued.
Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman’s new paper in support of the measure raises concerns that could doom the proposal in the courts.