- Back
- Education, Culture, Ideology
- (A) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations
- (A) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements
- Immigration
- (A) Monetary Policy
- (A) Fiscal Policy
- (A) Science, Technology and Innovation
- (A) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law
- (A) Energy and Environmental Policy
- (A) National Defense and Foreign Policy
- (B) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements
- (B) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations
- (B) National Defense and Foreign Policy
- (B) Fiscal Policy
- (B) Monetary Policy
- (B) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law
- (B) Science, Technology and Innovation
- (B) Energy and Environmental Policy
- (A) Education
- (B) Culture and Ideology
- (A) Culture and Ideology
- (B) Education
- Russia and Europe
- Middle East
- China and the Far East
- Latin America
By Kimberly Strassel - We still don’t know the extent to which human activity plays a role in warming, given natural variability, data limitations, uncertain models and fluctuations in solar activity. Models predicting what is to come remain all over the map. U.S. historical data doesn’t support claims of increased frequency or intensity of extreme weather. Climate change is likely to have little effect on economic growth. U.S. climate policies, even drastic ones, will have negligible effect on global temperatures. Read More
By Bjorn Lomborg - Time hasn’t been kind to the idea that climate change was humanity’s last problem or that the planet would unite to solve it. A rapid global transition from fossil fuels is, and always has been, impossible. There are several reasons that make it so. Many developing nations never shared the Western elite’s obsession with reducing emissions. Life for most people on earth is still a battle against poverty, hunger and disease. Corruption, lack of jobs and poor education hamper their futures. Tackling global temperatures a century out has never ranked high among the priorities of developing...
By Gerard Baker -… But the scales of virtue must balance, and it isn’t simply a case of administrative incompetence but an act of abject moral failure by a government to fail to secure its borders….There is no higher obligation for a sovereign power to its own people. The reckless toleration of the entry of …millions, of illegal immigrants threatens a nation’s security, undermines its cohesion, interferes with its orderly economic and social functions. It … actively undermines respect for the rule of law…. Read More
By Tunku Varadarajan , Nathan Myhrvold - ...“There are activists who oppose funding or experiments. There’s no evidence I can see that many of the people involved in the climate debate want a solution.”...Geoengineering would appear to be the application of science par excellence. …“Opponents worry that once you have geoengineering, people won’t make sacrifices to cut emissions. They want a sword of Damocles hanging over humanity as a means to force us to follow their ideology.”…. In climate change, he says, this moralistic attitude takes the following form: “I don’t like aspects of our society, I don’t like technology,...
By Mark P. Mills - You know, the plan to use far more “clean energy” and far less hydrocarbons—the oil, natural gas and coal that today supply 84% of global energy needs. The IEA’s 287-page report released this month, “The Role of Critical Minerals in Clean Energy Transitions,” is devastating to those ambitions. Read More