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The barbarism of Muslim extremism, on its face, cannot be condoned in these modern times.
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Hillary Clinton’s promise to seek a Constitutional amendment on day one of her presidency is on the right track—but with the wrong case.
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If the IKEA units were as safe as an average vehicle they would have caused 67,000 deaths, not six.
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The generation coming up now doesn’t want to sound like Antonin Scalia.
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In “Telemedicine Runs Into Crony Doctoring” (op-ed, July 23), Prof. Shirley Svorny criticizes state licensing boards for protecting local doctors against competition posed by telemedicine. What nonsense.
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We don’t understand why it is necessary to force the interest rates on our and our kids’ savings accounts to near zero, to make the TBTF institutions even bigger.
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The judicial branch of government has become an extension of the executive branch at every level and that doesn’t bode well for the democratic process.
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Act 10 slashed public-school teachers’ salaries by more than 13% (or $7,675 a year, on average) and stifled subsequent merit raises and cost-of-living adjustments.
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The recent history of Egypt reminds me of the old saying, “one man, one vote, one time.”
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France embraced Mrs. Clinton’s policies long ago. It even gave more concessions to labor than to job creators. Now France has some very troubling results that it can’t unwind.
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The risk/return calculation for Virginia Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe in restoring voting rights to convicted felons, without consent from the legislature and no support in the state constitution, is nearly all upside with minimal risk.
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Today’s college degree indicates the holder’s commercial competence as about equal to that of one with a high-school diploma many years ago.
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