The Tea Party movement is blazing its agenda across America. But this is a movement without a cause. If the Whigs, Populists and Feminists can be co-opted by the Democrats and Republicans, this newest third party will suffer the same fate.
America still retains its innovative edge over China and India. But as long as Washington continues to handpick winners and losers, our preeminence is in jeopardy.
The United States is in unprecedented decline. Future generations will look back at the past decade as the beginning of the end of American hegemony.
The principles of transformationalism—idealism spread by the barrel of a gun—have been central to America’s foreign-policy failings over the last eight years. With a new leadership in power, Washington has a chance to right past wrongs. But that w
Jeffrey Sachs explains why the new world order of the twenty-first century is crisis-prone.
Conrad Black responds to Robert Tucker and David Hendrickson
George W. Bush believes that democracy in the Arab world is the key to security. All in due time, says Ariel Sharon.
The "near miss" at Taba is being widely promoted as the natural starting point for future Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy. The only problem, is there was no "near miss."
South Africa today, to paraphrase Marx, is haunted by a specter: the specter of the rest of Africa. This ghost hovers not only over whites, and over investors who are influenced by them, but over blacks as well.
The world today, with some exceptions, is as furiously religious as it ever was, and in some places more so than ever.