Opinion
Related Articles
During National Police Week, we must confront a growing threat
Last week was National Police Week, when Americans honor the men and women who put on the badge and confront danger every day to protect our communities.
SharesNAACP's college sports boycott scheme puts politics before Black empowerment
When people and groups show you who they really are, believe them.
SharesLetter to the editor: Ending the Gaza blockade would invite the next war
The nations that have criticized Israel's treatment of the extremists it detained from the so-called Gaza flotilla are wrong for doing so ("Video of Israeli official taunting bound Gaza activists draws ire from foreign officials, Netanyahu," Web, May 20).
SharesThe Senate finally walks the walk on government shutdowns
Government shutdowns cause nothing but pain for most Americans.
SharesAnath Hartmann: Why I became a Democrat
Two weeks ago, I became a Democrat.
SharesLiberal climate alarmists owe the world an apology
For half a century, we have been told that the end is near, and if we do not immediately allow the government to impose significant changes on the way we live and use energy, we will burn to death.
SharesAssassination culture dominating the left
Two high-profile murder cases are moving forward on opposite sides of the country. In each, because of its reckless rhetoric, the left is an unindicted co-conspirator.
SharesDo we still have a Constitution?
This week, President Trump announced that he plans to give away tax dollars without congressional or judicial authorization to friends and allies who he believes were mistreated by President Biden.
SharesThe Senate's housing bill has a Warren problem
Washington has been chasing a silver bullet on housing for years. The latest target: institutional investors.
SharesTaiwan is the epicenter of the AI revolution
Several months ago, while practicing law and journalism, I began studying artificial intelligence at Florida Atlantic University's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
SharesTrump risks GOP majorities by hunting Republican heretics
On Tuesday, Sen. Bill Cassidy, the Louisiana Republican who lost his effort to be reelected to another term in the Senate as a result of President Trump's opposition, returned the favor.
SharesNational security demands that White House act on maritime legislation
For the first time since Richard Nixon was in the White House, there is a national consensus that we must revive the nation's strategically important maritime industry. Driving that consensus is an understanding that the nation's economy operates at the whim of those who have the ships - in a word, China.
SharesFDR could not pack the Supreme Court, but two-time presidential loser Harris thinks she can
Back in 1937, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was riding higher than almost any other politician in American history.
SharesLetter to the editor: Republicans can disagree with MAGA and still be GOP
Kelly Sadler seems to suggest that every Republican lawmaker in Congress must align with the MAGA agenda or else be a leftist and a traitor ("Republican voters want team players," Web, May 18).
SharesLetter to the editor: Energy stability is not guaranteed
The global economy is approaching a dangerous energy vulnerability that policymakers appear unwilling to confront.
SharesLetter to the editor: Cassidy's fall was deserved
President Trump took great pleasure in his recent takedown of Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana ("Trump claims revenge over impeachment vote after Cassidy loses primary," Web, May 16).
SharesOne-sided ceasefire only serves Iran's interests
The recent strike on the United Arab Emirates' nuclear plant and recent Iranian attacks on shipping should have exposed the fallacy of the current "ceasefire."
SharesTrump's FDA shakeup defends harm reduction over politics
The narrative around the departure of Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary is being actively (mis)shaped by White House opponents.
SharesA $580 billion reason why bipartisanship still works
In Washington, bipartisanship has fallen out of fashion.
SharesRailroad merger will streamline freight, power America's economy and create jobs
On April 30, our companies, Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern, submitted an amended application to the Surface Transportation Board (STB) to merge our two railroads and create America's first transcontinental railroad.
Shares