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Aug 9, 2017, 1:54:45 AM8/9/17
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Popular Mechanics
 
 
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The Incredible, Impossible, Fake Airliners of YouTube
 
The art of clickbait.
 
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The Impossible Planet in the 'Star Trek: Voyager' Opening Credits
 
It's been staring you in the face this whole time.
 
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How Viper Fans Crowdfunded the Nurburgring Record Dodge Never Attempted
 
Meet the grassroots crew that took the Viper to the most challenging race track on earth.
 
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Virgin Galactic Conducts Sixth Successful SpaceShipTwo Glide Test
 
The spaceflight company is getting closer and closer to firing up the rocket engines on their new SpaceShipTwo.
 
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U.S. Military Bases Now Have the OK to Shoot Down Drones
 
Any drone caught over a U.S. military base can now be downed or destroyed.
 
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Teen Wins $10,000 In Microsoft Excel Competition
 
No American has won the Excel competition in 16 years, though they have won on other Microsoft Office products including Word and PowerPoint.
 
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8:07 AM (4 hours ago)
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August 08 2017

VISIT NATIONALREVIEW.COM

  

On Afghanistan, Trump Is Right to Hesitate

Rupert Stone

Secretary of Defense James Mattis and other military men are often said to provide a stabilizing influence in the Trump administration, helping moderate the reckless policies favored by the president and his hardline chief strategist, Steve Bannon. But when it comes to Afghanistan, Trump and Bannon have been the cautious...

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top stories

The RAISE Act: An Explainer

Berny Belvedere

Editor’s Note: This article is reprinted from Arc with permission. The RAISE Act, which stands for Reforming American Immigration for Strong Employment, is a bill introduced earlier this year...

The Mainstream Media Misrepresents a Google Engineer’s Memo

Alexandra DeSanctis

It is getting more difficult by the day to have a rational public conversation about anything. The latest panicked hubbub is over a memo about diversity in the tech industry, written by a Google...

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Google Burns a Heretic

Mona Charen

James Damore is fortunate that we don’t burn heretics at the stake, because he has blasphemed. The fired Google engineer might as well have been writing a script designed to prove that one of...

How Progressives Will Scare Off Moderates and Squander the Moral High Ground

Elliot Kaufman

A recent Harvard-Harris poll reveals that 57 percent of Americans have an “unfavorable opinion of Black Lives Matters protests and protesters.” Broken down further, the results only get worse...

Discrimination against Men at Google

Steven E. Rhoads

A male engineer at Google created a storm by arguing that men and women are deeply different and that the difference helps explain why women are less likely than men to work for Google and rise...

PETA: Cheese Is Sexist

Julie Kelly

I bet Google Memo Guy eats a lot of cheese. Because according to PETA, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, cheese is the most sexist thing you can eat. The innocent-looking piece of...


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Pocket Hits
We Have a Political Problem No One Wants to Talk About: Very Old Politicians
We Have a Political Problem No One Wants to Talk About: Very Old Politicians
Harold Pollack, Vox
23 senators are at least 70. Seven are 80 or older.
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Peter Thiel Has Been Hedging His Bet On Donald Trump
Peter Thiel Has Been Hedging His Bet On Donald Trump
Ryan Mac, BuzzFeed
Peter Thiel has said publicly that Trump’s administration is “off to a terrific start.” Privately, he’s told friends that there is a 50% chance the current presidency “ends in disaster.”
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How Successful People Make Decisions Differently
How Successful People Make Decisions Differently
Stephanie Vozza, Fast Company
Once you realize which decisions are really important, use these four strategies to make sure you get what you want.
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How America Lost Its Mind
How America Lost Its Mind
Kurt Andersen, The Atlantic
The nation’s current post-truth moment is the ultimate expression of mind-sets that have made America exceptional throughout its history.
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Professional Romance Novelists Can Write 3,000 Words a Day. Here's How They Do It
Professional Romance Novelists Can Write 3,000 Words a Day. Here's How They Do It
Thu-Huong Ha, Quartz
Writing is not a sexy business. It’s not a rare butterfly that floats down and gently kisses you on the nose with a brilliant idea that conjures a hurricane of cash. It’s frustrating, and it’s lonely, and for most people, it doesn’t pay.
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Not All Google Employees Disagree With Anti-Diversity Polemic
Not All Google Employees Disagree With Anti-Diversity Polemic
Thuy Ong, The Verge
‘More people have been agreeing with it than I would like’
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Rich SF Residents Get a Shock: Someone Bought Their Street
Rich SF Residents Get a Shock: Someone Bought Their Street
Matier & Ross, San Francisco Chronicle
Thanks to a little-noticed auction sale, a South Bay couple are the proud owners of one of the most exclusive streets in San Francisco — and they’re looking for ways to make their purchase pay.
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Amazon Owns a Whole Collection of Secret Brands
Amazon Owns a Whole Collection of Secret Brands
Mike Murphy, Quartz
Trawling through over 800 trademarks that Amazon has either been awarded or applied for through the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), Quartz identified 19 brands that are owned by Amazon and sell products or have product pages.
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Your iPhone Reduces Your Brainpower, Even If It's Just Sitting There
Your iPhone Reduces Your Brainpower, Even If It's Just Sitting There
Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic
A silent, powered-off phone can still distract the most dependent users.
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Trump’s Trade Pullout Roils Rural America
Trump’s Trade Pullout Roils Rural America
Adam Behsudi, Politico
After the U.S. withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, other nations launch 27 separate negotiations to undercut U.S. exporters.
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8:15 PM (16 hours ago)
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The latest from InsideSources.

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You're Invited

On Thursday, August 17, please attend the first-ever Brigadoon Dinner to discuss Radio + Entertainment in the Age of Trump with two of DC's leading radio personalities. This will be an intimate dinner limited to 20 attendees and will allow for an open and frank discussion with all participants.
 
RSVP | Ticket @ http://thebrigadoon.com/store/brigadoon-dinner-radio-entertainment-in-the-age-of-trump
 
Enter discount code "IS25" for $25 off.

What Washington's Talking About


Groupthink
 
A Google employee who authored a memo criticizing the tech giant’s diversity policies has been fired for “perpetuating gender stereotypes.” [Mark Bergen and Ellen Huet, Bloomberg]
 
“The primary victims of this new culture of groupthink are social conservatives and other dissenters from identity politics. In field after field and company after company, conservatives understand that the price of their employment is silence. Double standards abound, and companies intentionally try to keep work environments ‘safe’ from disagreement. Radical sexual and racial politics are given free rein. Disagree — and lose your job.” [David French, National Review]

Some Rethinking
 
The Man Who Wrote Those Password Rules Has a New Tip: N3v$r M1^d! [Robert McMillan, Wall Street Journal]
 
‘Free lunches’ like the $15 minimum wage may hurt the people they’re meant to help [Catherine Rampell, Washington Post]

[IS] Opinions    Politics
The Difficult Legacy of Watergate
By Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan

Forty-three years ago, Richard Nixon, facing certain impeachment, resigned the presidency. As Gerald Ford assumed the office later that same day, Ford remarked to the American people that “our long national nightmare is over.”

READ MORE

News    Technology
Sinclair-Tribune Merger Opponents Say It’s ‘Unlawful, Not in the Public Interest’
By Giuseppe Macri

Unlikely allies in the cable, satellite, news, consumer protection, and regulatory sectors joined forces Monday to oppose Sinclair Broadcast Group’s pending purchase of Tribune Media.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Politics
New Approaches Are Needed to End Campus Sexual Assault
By Samuel R. Staley

The U.S. Department of Education’s top civil-rights official set off a firestorm when she told the New York Times — erroneously — that 90 percent of college sexual assault cases “fall into the category of ‘we were both drunk’” or post-relationship regret.

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News    Technology
AT&T-Time Warner Merger Would Hurt Competition, Trump Transition Team Economist Says
By Giuseppe Macri

The AT&T-Time Warner merger would hurt competition in the premium cable marketplace and raise antitrust concerns, according to an economist and Trump administration transition team member.

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[IS] Opinions    Politics
Trump’s Comments Aren’t Pro-Police; They Insult the Profession
By Jonathan Haggerty and Arthur Rizer

A petty thief nabs a duffel bag full of sex toys and pornography from a parked SUV in Long Island. Authorities soon find the thief and take him to an interrogation room, where a gruff, middle-age officer threatens to kill him and beats the man, restrained by shackles, until junior officers intervene.

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News    Energy
Why a Low-Carbon Economy Drives the Need for Rare Earths
By Erin Mundahl

In the future, the world may be low carbon, but it likely won’t be low-metal. That is the conclusion reached by a recent study by the World Bank, which analyzed the demand that growth in clean and renewable energy technology would place on worldwide supplies of certain minerals and rare-earth metals.

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8:08 PM (16 hours ago)
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Aug 8 (1 day ago)
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August 07 2017

VISIT NATIONALREVIEW.COM

  

In Defense of Trump’s Generals

David French

I’m going to have to disagree with a number of people I respect. It’s good, for this time, that American generals John Kelly, James Mattis, and H. R. McMaster are together working at the apex of American civilian government. It’s good, for this time, that these same men are operating as a check on the most erratic and...

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top stories

Democrats Who Want to Be President Back Away from Israel

Jonathan S. Tobin

The shift to the left by Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York demonstrates the power of a party base that is abandoning the Jewish state. Both were...

How Much Should Society Stigmatize Marijuana?

Max Bloom

By 2011, Maastricht, a pleasant town in the southern Netherlands, was worried that the marijuana legally sold in its coffee shops was attracting too many drug tourists. To address the concern,...

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You, Too, Can Help Save Iraqi Christians

Kathryn Jean Lopez

St. Louis, Mo. — Maybe it was the Iraqi-born bishop praying the Lord’s Prayer in Aramaic, the language that Jesus spoke. Maybe it was being in the same venue here where (Saint) Pope John Paul...

The American Solidarity Party Charts Its Own Path

Jeff Cimmino

The two-party system is a staple of American politics. And yet, however inevitable their sidelining seems, the number and the vitality of third parties continues to surprise. One such is the...

Al Franken, Un-Funny Man of the Senate

Kyle Smith

Al Franken was more prepared than you might think to run successfully for the U.S. Senate in 2008. Being a senator is serious business, and Franken had just spent 35 years not being funny. The...


In Trump’s Turbulent White House, Women Skirt the Drama

Tiana Lowe

Over the past couple of weeks, the Trump administration has been likened to everything from Survivor to the French Revolution. The West Wing has proven to be equal parts battleground and...

Aug 7 (2 days ago)
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August 07 2017

VISIT NATIONALREVIEW.COM

  

Responding to Russia

Jim Geraghty

In today’s Jolt, we’ll explore a question of how and when to confront Russia, why the Senate is being a little more productive than before, and why Ohio governor John Kasich is the thing that wouldn’t leave. I know some you find clicking through on “READ MORE” to be a pain, so I’ll try to make it worth your while.

What Is the Wisest, Least-Dangerous Way to Confront Russia?

Our Michael Brendan Dougherty asks a fair question on the topic of whether the United States should provide weapons to Ukraine. Just what is it we want to achieve?

Ultimately, Ukraine is of peripheral interest to the United States and Western Europe even if annoying Russia has incredible appeal right now. Giving it arms, or extending to it a kind of quasi-membership in NATO might irritate Russia, but it would also create a new dependent for the U.S. And it could embolden Ukrainian nationalists to do something foolish, the way that Mikheil Saakashvili jeopardized Georgia in 2008 by acting provocatively once he thought he had the backing of the ...

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Aug 7 (2 days ago)
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The latest from InsideSources.

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From Our Sponsor -- You're Invited

On Thursday, August 17, please attend the first-ever Brigadoon Dinner to discuss Radio + Entertainment in the Age of Trump with two of DC's leading radio personalities. This will be an intimate dinner limited to 20 attendees and will allow for an open and frank discussion with all participants.
 
Learn how America's political climate is impacting entertainment and radio programming. Have a discussion with fellow attendees and special guests in an informal and relaxed dinner setting.  Not only is the topic important, but the special guests, Kelly Collis and Darik Kristofer, are at the top of the radio game and need to entertain the most challenging and politically engulfed city on the planet.
 
RSVP | Ticket @ http://thebrigadoon.com/store/brigadoon-dinner-radio-entertainment-in-the-age-of-trump
 
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What Washington's Talking About


The Debt-Ceiling Crisis Is Real
 
“Once the unthinkable happens, no future constraints on congressional irresponsibility with regard to the national debt will remain. Prioritization will constitute the intentional subordination, not just of one claim to another, but of all claims to the pettiness of congressional politics. As a result, the once unassailable credit of the United States will become a perennial hostage to politics, and in response the debt markets will demand much higher interest rates. These are noisy times in Washington. But even in this context, the awfulness of a debt ceiling crisis should galvanize us. Like an impending execution, it should concentrate our minds — now, while something can still be done.” [Edward D. Kleinbard, New York Times]

Pence 2020?
 
“Calling it ‘disgraceful and offensive,’ Vice President Mike Pence on Sundaydenounced a New York Times report that he is quietly building his own shadow campaign for 2020. ‘Today's article in the New York Times is disgraceful and offensive to me, my family, and our entire team,’ Pence said in a statement Sunday. ‘The allegations in this article are categorically false and represent just the latest attempt by the media to divide this Administration.’” [David Cohen, Politico]

News    Education
Report Finds That Teacher Evaluation Efforts Have Been Successful in D.C.
By Leo Doran

A controversial high stakes teacher evaluation system that included financial incentives for high performing teachers has been shown to be successful in improving teacher quality and boosting academic performance in Washington D.C.’s public schools, according to a newly released report.

READ MORE

News    Energy
Lengthy FERC Confirmation Process Shows ‘New Normal’ for Infrastructure
By Erin Mundahl

Normally a routine appointment, in today’s partisan environment, the commission became an inadvertent bone of political contention, delaying not only confirmation of the new commissioners, but also numerous energy projects.

READ MORE

News    Finance
Recession Aftermath: The Rise and Fall of Washington D.C.
By Connor D. Wolf

Washington D.C. has fueled resentment as the nation’s capital continued to show economic strength even as much of the country struggled. But what’s often overlooked is it has since dropped from its place at the top.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Education
Fight Against School Vouchers Pits a Powerful Educational Establishment Against Low-Income Parents
By Charlotte Hays

Vouchers put educational choices for children in the hands of the people who care most: the parents. The voucher program was developed in the 1980s to give low-income families more choice in where their kids go to school. Rich people already have this choice.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Education
On Vouchers, the Evidence Is In, and It’s Not Good
By Peter Montgomery

The continued push for school vouchers, which transfer scarce taxpayer dollars out of public education and into private schools, is “a triumph of ideology over evidence that should worry anyone who wants to improve results for children.”

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Education
What History Can Teach Us About Private School Vouchers
By Neil Campbell and Abel McDaniels

President Donald Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos have proposed cutting the Department of Education budget by more than 13 percent, or $9 billion, while allocating $250 million toward a federally funded voucher program. And while a nationwide K-12 voucher program would be a first-of-its-kind initiative, private school vouchers are nothing new.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Politics
The Establishment — on Both Sides — Weaponizes ‘Fake News’
By Dan Backer

The epidemic of “fake news” is apparently so contagious it has spread to India. Ravi Prasad, the country’s Electronics and Information Technology Minister, claimed India is “helpless” in combating “objectionable content.” The Indian government has even threatened to jail people responsible for spreading that content.

READ MORE

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Nyi Nyi

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Aug 9, 2017, 11:52:56 PM8/9/17
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Task & Purpose Today

7 Hacks To Travel Like A Rock Star On A Military Salary

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Trump: North Korea Will Feel ‘Fire And Fury Like The World Has Never Seen’ If They Continue Threats

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The Corps May Finally Open Boot Camp, Combat Training At MCRD San Diego To Women

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US Intelligence: North Korea Finally Has Nukes That Can Fit Onto ICBMs

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The Marine Corps Doesn’t Know Why It Chose ‘Semper Fi’ As Its Motto

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‘This War… Is Forever’: Afghan Refugees Say What They Really Think About US Forces

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Why Are So Many Marines Dying Far From The Battlefields?

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How The Army Is Using Augmented Reality To Bolster Troop Readiness

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The US May Be Rushing Into A Messy New Campaign Against ISIS In The Philippines, Report Says

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More Marines Are Headed For Afghanistan To Support The 300 Already There

READ THE STORY
 

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Aug 10, 2017, 12:00:08 AM8/10/17
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President Trump and North Korea exchange threats in a new war of words. I’m Davan Maharaj, editor-in-chief of the Los Angeles Times. Here are some story lines I don’t want you to miss today.

TOP STORIES

‘They Will Be Met With Fire and Fury’? Who Said This, Trump or Kim Jong Un?
“They will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.” Brinkmanship and bluster have long been the hallmarks of North Korea’s strategy, but those words were from President Trump and directed at the government in Pyongyang. They came not long after a report that U.S. intelligence officials had assessed that North Korea has successfully produced a miniaturized nuclear warhead that can be carried atop a missile. The response? A statement from North Korea didn’t mention Trump’s words but warned it was “carefully examining” a plan to attack the U.S. territory of Guam. One big concern among diplomats is that a misstep or miscalculation could trigger a chain of events that escalate into a new, nuclear-charged Korean War. 

More Politics 
— Trump emphasized the need for stepped-up law enforcement to combat the nation’s opioid problem, an approach that is at odds with a report released last week by the special commission he appointed to address abuse. 
— Trying to boost morale, the deputy secretary of the State Department told employees that the Trump administration’s goal is not to destroy the agency but to streamline it

The New LAPD: Los Angeles Police Drones?
Send in the drones? The L.A. County Sheriff’s Department already operates one after an abrupt announcement in January that drew protests from civil liberties advocates. The Los Angeles Police Department is taking a slower approach. It bought a pair three years ago, only to lock them away. Now it’s back with a vision to fly a droneas part of a one-year pilot program, to gather information in situations such as standoffs with hostage-takers or bomb scares. Opponents worry about Orwellian mission creep or even weaponization. 

Requiem for a Rhinestone Cowboy
“By the Time I Get to Phoenix.” “Gentle on My Mind.” “Wichita Lineman.” “Rhinestone Cowboy.” Glen Campbell was born the “seventh son of a seventh son,” got his first guitar at age 4 from a Sears Roebuck catalog — then went on to sell more than 45 million records over his half-century career. But for Campbell, who died at age 81, some of the loudest cheers came during his final years, when he rejected the shame and secrecy that can surround Alzheimer’s disease. Times staff writer Randy Lewis saw first hand how Campbell faced it, with a song.

Glen Campbell

Glen Campbell at home in Malibu in 2011. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

The Streaming Service That Mickey Built
Netflix changed Hollywood. Now, Hollywood may change Netflix. Walt Disney Co., the town’s biggest studio, said it will end its distribution deal with the Los Gatos, Calif.-based company and launch its own film and TV streaming service in 2019, alongside an ESPN service next year. Will other studios follow suit? Either way, Netflix has increased its original programming and just this week announced a six-episode talk show by David Letterman and the acquisition of a comic-book publisher. It’s come at a cost: $20 billion in long-term debt and obligations. 

And the Oscars’ Presidency Goes to …
In times past, being the president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was a largely ceremonial role. Not so in recent years, as the organization has pushed to diversify, plans to build a museum in L.A. and tries to shore up the Oscars’ TV ratings. Into the fray will jump cinematographer John Bailey, a surprise candidate who won election over some more well-known names such as actress Laura Dern. He’ll succeed Cheryl Boone Isaacs, who was the first African American to head the academy. 

A New Air of Accountability
For more than a decade, air quality officials have warned against building housing within 500 feet of heavy traffic, yet thousands of homes have been constructed near freeways. In 2016, the city of L.A. started requiring new housing near freeways to install high-efficiency air filters. Yet as The Times reported last month, no procedures were in place to document compliance. Now Mayor Eric Garcetti has ordered building inspectors to begin tracking this information.

MUST-WATCH VIDEO

— In a stare-down between hikers and a mountain lion, the big cat always wins

— Chef Gordon Ramsay has a soft side. No, really, he does. 

— A report from the Rams’ training camp.

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CALIFORNIA

— Columnist Steve Lopez asks: Do regulators in California have your back when utilities or industries run amok, or when there’s a threat to public health in your neighborhood?

— The man credited with leading an initiative that brought more healthful meals to Los Angeles’ public school students has been charged with embezzlement, forgery and mismanagement of funds.

— Judicial Watch sued to get Hillary Clinton’s emails. Now it wants information on California voters.

— A 19-year-old from West Covina was one of the three U.S. Marines lost when a military aircraft crashed off the Australian coast last week.

HOLLYWOOD AND THE ARTS

— President Trump says he’s not on vacation, but late-night TV hosts aren’t buying it.

— When conservative radio host Dennis Prager conducts the Santa Monica Symphony, there will be no avoiding politics.

— Times theater critic Charles McNulty remembers the late Barbara Cook as a Broadway singer who revealed the great American songbook in a new light.

— Kesha’s first album in five years is out, after a protracted legal battle with her former producer. So what does it sound like?

CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD

If you’ve ever seen the first “Godzilla” movie from Tokyo’s Toho studio, you know his stomp. Haruo Nakajima, the man in the rubber monster suit in the 1954 classic, has died at age 88. “I am the original, the real thing,” he said in 2014. “My Godzilla was the best.”

NATION-WORLD

— Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing the growing prospect of criminal charges that could ultimately dislodge him.

— In Kenya, turnout for a fiercely contested presidential electionappeared to be high among the 19.6 million registered voters. Opposition leader Raila Odinga alleged Wednesday the results were manipulated by hackers.

— Police in France are searching for a driver who slammed his BMW into a group of soldiers Wednesday, injuring six.

— It took courage, craziness and chutzpah for a San Diego entrepreneur to open an American-style craft beer brewery in Berlin, but Germans are drinking it up.

— Which puppy will be a good guide dog? Ask mom!

ADVERTISEMENT

BUSINESS

— “Girls Trip” producer Will Packer has had a remarkable run of hit movies by marketing directly to their target audiences rather than massive ad campaigns in L.A. and New York. 

— By firing the engineer who wrote a now-infamous memo, Google shows what you can and can’t say at work.

SPORTS

— Joe West, the longest-serving umpire in the majors, has been suspended three games for labeling Adrián Beltré as the biggest complainer in baseball.

— UCLA football would like to drop all the talk about missed passes.

OPINION

— In leaking a federal climate change report, scientists are sending a message to Trump: Global warming is real.

— Today is the 72nd anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki. Think about this: There are almost 15,000 nuclear weapons in the world now.

WHAT OUR EDITORS ARE READING

— Here‘s the draft of the climate change report that scientists feared the Trump administration would not release. (New York Times) 

— “The likes of which this world has never seen before”: a favorite Trump phrase. (Toronto Star) 

— A new book traces the origins of today’s celebrity culture back to the 18th century. (Literary Review) 

— What can crows living in cities tell us about ourselves? This artistically told story explains. (CityLab)

ONLY IN L.A.

Cold-pressed juice may be relentlessly on trend these days, but at Jugos Azteca in Highland Park, the juice is old-school and a lot less expensive. Just as it has for 21 years, it specializes in Mexican-style fruit and vegetable juices, smoothies, tortas, tostadas and snacks. But it has taken a new-school approach by posting videos on Instagram, sometimes as many as 30 a day, to juice up its business. 

Please send comments and ideas to Davan Maharaj

If you like this newsletter, please share it with friends.

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The latest from InsideSources.

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On Thursday, August 17, please attend the first-ever Brigadoon Dinner to discuss Radio + Entertainment in the Age of Trump with two of DC's leading radio personalities. This will be an intimate dinner limited to 20 attendees and will allow for an open and frank discussion with all participants.
 
RSVP | Ticket @ http://thebrigadoon.com/store/brigadoon-dinner-radio-entertainment-in-the-age-of-trump
 
Enter discount code "IS25" for $25 off.

What Washington's Talking About


‘Fire and Fury’
 
“President Trump’s unsettling threat Tuesday aimed at North Korea was reckless and unnecessary. In its bombast, it resembled nothing so much as Kim Jong Un’s regular denunciations of the United States, frantic and hyperbolic. Why would the president of the world’s most powerful nation want to descend to that level? … North Korea’s steadily advancing nuclear weapons and missile programs are serious; The Post reported Tuesday that intelligence officials believe the Pyongyang regime has successfully miniaturized a nuclear warhead to fit on a missile, the next step in a weapons system that could hit the United States. Dealing with that will require patient pressure and skilled diplomacy, perhaps for years. Instead, Mr. Trump has strut into the arena with a jarring rhetorical grenade.” [Editorial, Washington Post]

Bias at Google
 
“Google’s leftwing biases are hardly news. Recall YouTube’s censorship last fall of PragerU’s conservative educational videos on topics such as university diversity and the Iraq war. The Google subsidiary deemed the videos ‘potentially objectionable.’ Potentially? The Damore firing underscores why so many don’t think Google should be trusted as an arbiter of content. Google enjoys a quasi-monopoly in search, which it uses to subordinate paid content to free media. Its algorithms are secret and supposedly aim to make information useful. Determining utility, however, invariably involves value judgments. So the question: Does Google deprioritize content it deems objectionable or antithetical to its values?” [Editorial, Wall Street Journal]
 
Google’s War Over the Sexes [Ross Douthat, New York Times]

News    Energy
Fracking Opens Possibilities for Growth of U.S. Natural Gas Exports
By Erin Mundahl

The development of new hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling technology allowed domestic producers to access deposits of oil previously thought to be unexploitable, increasing the supply of oil on the market, and helping to push prices down.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Politics
For College Grads, the Price of Public Service Shouldn’t be Huge Debt
By Linda A. Klein

In 2007, Congress and President George W. Bush realized that jobs critical to the day-to-day operation of our country and crucial to the well-being of millions of Americans would go unfilled.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Politics
Single-Payer — Dream, Nightmare or Status Quo?
By Robert F. Graboyes

The Hindenburg-like failure of congressional Republicans to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act has put single-payer health care — the Left’s dream and Right’s nightmare — on the minds of true believers in both camps. To a considerable degree, though, both sides’ hopes and fears are hyperbolic hokum.

READ MORE

News    Education
A Conversation With an Education Policy Mainstay: Fordham’s Chester Finn
By Leo Doran

Today’s interview is with the Thomas B. Fordham Institute’s longtime former president, Chester “Checker” Finn. Finn has been a fixture of education policy debates in Washington for decades.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Energy
Pipelines Are Safe and Efficient
By Ethan Dursteler and Paul Georgia

Approval of the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines has drawn the ire of many who claim that these pipelines pose a threat to the well-being of U.S. citizens. Although these protests provide lurid headlines that sell newspapers, their claims are not realistic. Access to cheap and reliable energy is critical to the economic vitality of the United States.

READ MORE

[IS] Opinions    Politics
Government Policies Helped Create the Opioid Epidemic
By Hadley Heath Manning

Opioid overdose is now the leading cause of death for Americans under the age of 50, claiming more than 60,000 lives per year. While many states have tried to address the opioid epidemic, the federal government has considered doing more. 

READ MORE

"The political lesson of Watergate is this: Never again must America allow an arrogant, elite guard of political adolescents to by-pass the regular party organization and dictate the terms of a national election." 
Gerald R. Ford

[IS] Opinions    Politics
The Difficult Legacy of Watergate
By Antony Davies and James R. Harrigan

Forty-three years ago, Richard Nixon, facing certain impeachment, resigned the presidency. As Gerald Ford assumed the office later that same day, Ford remarked to the American people that “our long national nightmare is over.”

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August 09 2017

Thomas Friedman on Trump, Clintons on North Korea, Google on Diversity

Jim Geraghty

Today’s effort to make clicking through worth your while: a New York Times columnist surprises everyone by acknowledging Trump’s campaign raised some valid concerns, the origins of that mild threat of mushroom clouds in the Pacific, and some eye-popping figures that raise serious questions about Google and corporate diversity initiatives.

Thomas Friedman: Hey, Maybe Trump Has a Point on Some Issues

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman calls on Democrats to acknowledge President Trump makes some valid points. He picks four issues:

  • We can’t take in every immigrant who wants to come here; we need, metaphorically speaking, a high wall that assures Americans we can control our border with a big gate that lets as many people in legally as we can effectively absorb as citizens.
  • The Muslim world does have a ...

READ MORE

top stories

Debt-Ceiling Fight Looms as Next Big Test for Congress

Michael Tanner

If you thought the recent fight over health-care reform was fun, get ready for the next big Washington circus: raising the debt ceiling. In October of 2015, Congress chose to avoid the usual...

Merkel’s Generous Refugee Policy Puts Germany at Risk

Robin Simcox

Merkel’s Generous Refugee Policy Puts Germany at Risk

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What’s Next for the Beleaguered Party System?

Jonah Goldberg

‘The Trump base is far bigger & stronger than ever before,” the president declared in a series of tweets Monday morning, and that “will never change.” Many observers were quick to point out that...

The Google Firing Demonstrates That Identity Politics Is Incoherent and Vicious

David French

If there is one good thing that can perhaps come from Google’s abrupt firing of Jeffrey Damore, the employee who wrote a memo urging the company to increase its ideological diversity and try...

How Did the Dems’ IT Scandal Suspects Get Here?

Michelle Malkin

Here is a radical proposition: The public has a right to know the immigration status and history of foreign criminal suspects. Their entrance and employment sponsorship records should not be...

See a Little Light

Kevin D. Williamson

It is easy to despair: nuclear confrontation abroad, social and intellectual decline at home. But the calendar helps, sometimes. At the nation’s leading technology company, an engineer has...


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Breaking News from Liberty Headlines
You have been a free subscriber since 3/22/2017

Liberty Headlines
Turmeric: 8 New Surprising
Health Benefits
Discover How Turmeric Can Protect Your Brain, Joints, Heart and More
Turmeric: Doctors Say This Spice Is a
 Brain Health Miracle
Turmeric has been revered for its healing powers since ancient times, but it's only in recent years that its remarkably diverse range of health benefits has come to light. 

One benefit in particular has emerged from the research that has astonished neurologists and cognitive health scientists alike. And if you're concerned about maintaining the health of your brain as you age, you'll surely be interested in learning about it.

Losing one's memory and mental abilities to menacing brain plaques or other cognitive issues is something we all fear, and the current statistics on the prevalence of cognitive decline in this country are not pretty. By age 65, sadly 1 in 9 Americans will suffer from severe cognitive decline, and by age 85, an astonishing 1 in 3 will.[1]

Researchers have been working for years to develop an effective treatment. But one "miracle" drug after another has failed to live up to its promises, and it's becoming more and more apparent that pharmaceuticals are not the solution. Unfortunately, the medical establishment is so narrowly focused on finding an elusive "cure" that scientifically proven prevention strategies are often ignored. 

I'm Joshua Corn, Editor-in-Chief of Live in the Now, one of the fastest-growing natural health publications in the nation. My passion for natural health drives me to seek the truth about the causes of health problems and to educate people on alternative solutions that are both safe and effective. 

Please keep reading, because I'll tell you about an amazingly effective way to protect your brain from the ravages of cognitive decline and boost your thinking and memory abilities quickly, naturally and safely. 

Nature's Brain-Protecting Miracle
There are a number of natural brain protectors out there, but did you know that one herb has shown more promise when it comes to supporting your neurological system than any other medical finding to date? It's a scientific fact that curcumin, an antioxidant compound found in the root of the turmeric plant, is one of the most powerful natural brain-protecting substances on the planet! It continues to amaze scientists with its remarkable cognitive health benefits. 

You may be familiar with turmeric as the bright-yellow spice that is commonly found in curry powder. Turmeric has a long history as a healing herb and culinary spice in India. Interestingly, India has the highest per capita consumption of turmeric AND the lowest incidence of cognitive decline worldwide![2] 

About Joshua Corn
Your Brain on Curcumin
The hallmark process associated with certain types of cognitive decline is the formation in the brain of abnormal protein structures. Normally when malformed proteins are formed within the brain, the immune system sends out cells known as macrophages, which engulf and destroy the proteins. If this ordinary function fails, defective proteins accumulate in the brain and cognitive decline can follow. 

That's why I was excited to read that recent research is showing curcumin encourages the immune system to send macrophages to the brain. A landmark clinical trial involving people with severe cognitive decline measured the effects of curcumin. Amazingly, the participants taking curcumin had significantly higher levels of dissolved abnormal proteins in their blood compared with those in the placebo group. 

This study showed that curcumin has the ability to effectively pass into the brain, bind to beta-amyloid plaques and assist the body in their breakdown.[3] Curcumin is one of the only substances known to have such a profound protective effect on the brain. 

INCREDIBLE HEALTH BENEFITS OF TURMERIC
Curcumin Combats Dangerous Inflammation
You may have heard about the dangers of "silent" chronic inflammation. It's been discussed by Dr. Oz and has made headlines in publications such as Newsweek and Time. It's important for you to know that low-grade inflammation is rapidly becoming recognized as the root cause of the development of cognitive decline, as well as a wide range of other serious health problems.[4]
The dangers of "silent" inflammation have been discussed by Dr. Oz and have made headlines in publications such as Newsweek and Time.
Unfortunately, most people don't do anything until the initial symptoms, such as muscle aches and joint discomfort, appear. When this happens, their gut reaction often is to go see a doctor, who is unlikely to correctly diagnose the problem, and more than likely will prescribe drugs that are far from safe and only provide short-term benefits. 

But the initial symptoms of pain are just the beginning. If left unchecked, chronic inflammation can damage your body in many ways. One of the worst examples of this is cognitive decline, which can ravage your memory and severely impact your quality of life in what should be your golden years. 

8 Ways Chronic Inflammation Can Damage
 Your Body
Cutting-edge science is showing that curcumin is one of the most powerful natural anti-inflammatories ever studied. Curcumin is so effective because it is a potent inhibitor of the body's most powerful inflammation-causing chemical, called Nf-kappa beta. Miraculously, curcumin has been shown in numerous studies to tame joint pain and muscle soreness, protect the brain, support cardiovascular health, bolster immunity and more.[5,6,7,8,9] If you have a lingering health problem that no doctor can resolve, you may be suffering from chronic inflammation and curcumin may be just the natural solution you've been looking for. 

How to Get the Most Out of Curcumin
Although you may be able to find high-quality turmeric powder at your local market, it's very difficult to verify its purity and potency. Plus, it's almost impossible to incorporate therapeutic amounts of curcumin into your diet on a daily basis as a spice. So, to put it simply, a high-quality curcumin supplement is your best bet! 

However, not all curcumin supplements are created equal. Unfortunately, most supplements out there don't have the necessary doses and components to get the job done. If you take the wrong supplement, you'll end up not only wasting money, but missing out on an incredible opportunity to protect your brain and keep harmful inflammation at bay. 

There are 3 major factors to consider when deciding on a curcumin supplement: 

1.Standardization and Dose: Standardization is the process by which the active ingredients in a plant are concentrated and brought to a consistent level. The active ingredients of turmeric are called curcuminoids, and there are actually three components: curcumin, demethoxycurcumin and bisdemethoxycurcumin. Any good curcumin supplement should include all three of these curcuminoids and be standardized to at least 75%. Otherwise, what you're getting could be little more than a pill filled with powdered turmeric root. The minimum recommended daily dose is 1,000 mg per day. 

2.Absorption: One problem with curcumin is that it's not easily absorbed. However, it was discovered that an extract of black pepper, called piperine, significantly enhances absorption of curcumin. In fact, one study found that the addition of piperine increased bioavailablity by 2,000%![10] So make sure that any curcumin supplement you take contains this important extract. 

Image
3.Price: Some people mistakenly believe that if you pay more you get better quality. My advice is that you don't need to pay more than $30 for a one-month supply. Many companies are taking advantage of the hype surrounding curcumin and charging more than double this amount. 

The Curcumin Supplement I Personally Recommend
Since cognitive decline and chronic inflammation are so widespread, I consider curcumin a "must take" supplement. However, when I was looking at the different options out there, I was shocked by how many poor-quality curcumin supplements there were. The ones that had "all the right stuff" were absurdly expensive, making this lifesaving nutrient off-limits for too many people! 

That's why I took it upon myself to develop an effective AND affordable curcumin supplement called Curcumin2K®. In addition to my work with Live in the Now, I also run Stop Aging Now, a company that has been making premium-grade dietary supplements for over 20 years. I developed Curcumin2K working with my Scientific Advisory Board, and it's simply the most effective and most affordable curcumin supplement on the market. 

I invite you to do your own research to make sure I'm not just shamelessly promoting my own product, but I think you'll find no other curcumin product like Curcumin2K

Here are just a few reasons why:
• Curcumin2K is made with 1,330 mg of turmeric extract standardized to contain a minimum of 95% of the full spectrum of curcuminoids, which includes curcumin, demethoxycurcumin and bisdemethoxycurcumin. 

• Curcumin2K is enhanced with 20 mg of BioPerine® black pepper extractstandardized to contain 95% piperine. BioPerine is the brand used in all the research that has shown piperine increases curcumin's absorption by up to 2,000%! 

Image
• Curcumin2K is made in Stop Aging Now's own FDA-inspected facility located in Florida to meet or exceed the stringent USP standards for quality, purity, potency and disintegration. 

• Curcumin2K is available for as little as $19.95 per bottle (which lasts a full month). This is up to 3 times less than similar high-quality brands. 

• Curcumin2K ships to you for free and comes with an amazing 365-day "any reason" guarantee. This way you risk nothing! 

Our Curcumin2K Customers Say It Best...
We already have tens of thousands of satisfied Curcumin2K customers. One of the best parts of my job is reading some of their remarkable success stories. Here are just a few that I've recently received: 

My memory is quicker. 
"I only use Stop Aging Now supplements because they're made in the USA and I've had great results. I've noticed since taking Curcumin2K that my memory is quicker. A great company with great products."* 
- Terry Bart from Jackson, WY
Curcumin2K is far superior. 
"Curcumin2K is far superior to the curcumin I had been taking. The potency is much higher, plus it contains black pepper extract. I find your products to be superior even to the higher-priced brands."* 
- Kathleen Roper from Fennville, MI
This has been a lifesaver for me! 
"I noticed shortly after taking Curcumin2K that my joint discomfort decreased and I was able to become more active again!!!! This has really been a lifesaver for me! I HIGHLY RECOMMEND IT!"* 
- Peter Dialfonso from Somerset, NJ
Within 5 days I noticed the difference. 
"I am 66 years old and recently tried Curcumin2K. Within 5 days I noticed the difference, after 1 week 90% of my 'old age' symptoms TOTALLY disappeared! I now enjoy life without pain."* 
- Ruth Rich from Possum Creek, Australia
I Want to Do More Than Just Sell You a Bottle
I truly believe that Curcumin2K will improve your health in more ways than you dreamed possible. I take it daily, and so do my wife, parents and many of my friends. But I certainly don't expect you to take my word for it! 

You can try Curcumin2K risk free. Not only is it extremely affordable, it will ship to you for free and, if you don't get results, your entire order is free! Curcumin2K also comes with an amazing 365-day "any reason" guarantee. That's right...try it for up to a year and, if it doesn't work, it's FREE. I stand by this product 100%. If you don't like it, you may return your purchase any time within one year for a full, no-questions-asked refund. That way, you risk nothing. 

Order Now and Feel Better Within 7 Days!
The best thing about Curcumin2K is how rapidly it begins to work. When I began taking it, I noticed the benefits within a few days, and I personally guarantee that you'll have a similar experience. Here's what you can expect: 

✓ Protection for your brain and cognitive function
✓ Improved mental clarity and memory retention
✓ Better mood balance and more energy
✓ A healthier heart and more balanced cholesterol
✓ Fewer aches and pains and less stiffness
✓ Smoother, more youthful-looking skin
✓ Support for liver health and detoxification
✓ Antioxidant protection against free radicals
✓ An overall increased sense of vitality
Whether you decide to use Curcumin2K or take another approach, I hope I've convinced you to take protecting your cognitive health seriously. I consider Curcumin2K to be one of the most important supplements I currently take. I think you'll find the same is true for you, so I hope that you'll give it a try! 

Get Curcumin2K For As Low As $19.95 Per Bottle PLUS Free Shipping. ORDER TODAY!
Scientific References
  1. http://www.alz.org/documents_custom/2016-facts-and-figures.pdf
  2. Neurology. 1998; 51(4): 1000-1008.
  3. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 2008 Feb;28(1):110-3.
  4. Int J Biochem Cell Biol. 2005 Feb;37(2):289-305.
  5. Int J Biochem Cell Biol. 2009; 41(1): 40-59.
  6. J Neurosci Res. 2004 Mar 15; 75(6): 742-50.
  7. Nutrition. Sept 2009; 25(9): 964-972.
  8. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2007 May; 321(2): 616-25.
  9. Biochem Pharmacol. 2005 Sep 1; 70(5): 700-13.
  10. Planta Med. 1998; 64(4): 353-356.
*Testimonial results not typical. Customers may have received a gift certificate after submitting their testimonial. The information contained above is for general consumer understanding and education, and should not be considered or used as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. This product is not an alternative to any prescription drug. If you are currently taking a prescription drug, consult your doctor before making any changes. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. All contents Copyright 2001-2017 Stop Aging Now, LLC. All rights reserved. Republishing of Stop Aging Now content without written authorization is strictly prohibited.
The information presented here is for general educational purposes only. MATERIAL CONNECTION DISCLOSURE: You should assume that the sender of this email has an affiliate relationship and/or another material connection to the persons or businesses mentioned in or linked to from this message and may receive commissions from purchases you make on subsequent web sites. You should not rely solely on information contained in this email to evaluate the product or service being endorsed. Always exercise due diligence before purchasing any product or service. FDA DISCLOSURE: These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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On Wednesday, August 9, 2017 at 12:54:45 PM UTC+7, Nyinyi put cha phyu wrote:
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Aug 11, 2017, 11:27:36 PM8/11/17
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August 11 2017

Nork Agonistes

Jonah Goldberg

Dear Reader (or at least the ones with Wi-Fi in their fallout shelters),

Analysts are trying to work out what happens to markets in the event of an all-out nuclear warhttps://t.co/hGEOi45G44

— Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) August 11, 2017

Well, that was a great tweet to get the weekend started.

From the article in the Wall Street Journal, not The Onion:“Strategists at Nordea Markets estimate that in the unlikely event of ‘a potentially uncontained military conflict’ in which global superpowers like China and Russia get involved, the European Central Bank would have to implement ‘highly dovish forward guidance’ and the yield curve would likely flatten due to weaker risk appetite.”

Oh, well, as long as the ECB will be issuing “highly dovish forward guidance” as the rest of us drink glowing ...

READ MORE

top stories

Stifling Diversity to Protect Diversity

David Harsanyi

Most of the mainstream media refer to the former Google engineer’s leaked internal memo as the “anti-diversity memo.” The technology website Recode calls it “sexist.” And Google fired James...

Index Capital Gains for Inflation, Mr. President

Larry Kudlow, James Carter

Index Capital Gains for Inflation, Mr. President

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Max Bloom

Here’s a story. Long before immigration from Mexico was an issue in America, immigration from America was an issue in Mexico. The question in the 1820s was over Mexico’s very sparsely populated...

Polls Don’t Measure What You Think They Measure

Max Bloom

Another stupid poll has been making the rounds. Two professors, Ariel Malka and Yphtach Lelkes, claim to have found that 52 percent of Republicans would support postponing the 2020 election...

Another Manufactured Diversity Spat

Jonah Goldberg

In 2005, the Los Angeles Times hired me as a columnist. That was great news (for me). But the best part was when Barbra Streisand canceled her subscription in protest. Her real complaint...

Ghost Voters

Deroy Murdock

Some 3.5 million more people are registered to vote in the U.S. than are alive among America’s adult citizens. Such staggering inaccuracy is an engraved invitation to voter fraud. The...


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