Recent controversies surrounding Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) have created a new "test of the news" for accuracy and impartiality.
Trials of political candidates always raise the danger of politicization of justice. A few reforms might lessen that possibility somewhat.
The General Services Administration (GSA) has tried to deal with unnecessary federal buildings since 1976. (It still faces that problem.)
Democrats have been screaming about an insurrection because that is their long game. They learned well from their tutor, Josef Goebbels.
Young voters overwhelmingly want to elect Donald Trump as President, but split between Tucker Carlson and Vivek Ramaswamy as VP nominee.
The U.S. Military needs to build the capability to operate in the Arctic, where the Russian Northern Fleet operates unchallenged.
The Harvard Corporation takes all observers are fools when they refused to dismiss Claudine Gay after plausible allegations of plagiarism.
Coal, much as the worthies at COP 28 want to eliminate it, is here to say, as became readily apparent at the meeting itself.
The Pentagon, with a budget of $832 billion, once again failed an audit, the sixth such failure in as many years.
Florida prison officials spent $3.6 million of federal taxpayers' money to repair their roofs, but ignored inmates' needs.