Title

Phosfluorescently target clicks-and-mortar growth strategies for timely infrastructures. Monotonectally embrace high-quality applications.
Features

Colorado Quotas

In rmarks to the Independence Institute today, Linda Chavez discusses the presence of racial, ethnic, and gender preferences in Colorado’s public education, contracting, and employment programs.

News

Palindrones

Nutty professors tend to get even nuttier during presidential election campaigns.

News

Duke to Parents: Please Save

Jim Belvin argues that paying for college is a team game and “but the player that’s perhaps most important in the long run is the parent.”

News

Star Wars In Nonfiction

Power lost . . . communication down . . . millions die from starvation . . . the United States has just been hit by an Electro-Magnetic Pulse, or EMP. This is not a new Lucas or Spielberg script, a fantasy concocted in the minds of a sci-fi junkie.

Features

Colorado Quotas In Action

Many public colleges and universities in Colorado use racial preferences in undergraduate admissions to increase minority enrollment.

News

Middle East Apologetics

In a recent panel at the Brookings Institution, foreign policy analysts proposed a new strategy for dealings between the United States and the Middle East.

News

Original Intent for All

Although conservatives generally embrace the original intent of the U.S. Constitution, while liberals see it as a living document, one legal scholar points out that a liberal read of the document constrains both left and right, while an interpretive one lends itself to exploitation by such political factions.

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Future of the Judiciary

As the race for the White House punches into overdrive, a critical factor in choosing the next president has seemingly been forgotten—federal court appointments.

News

An American Meltdown

America is on the verge of having “the largest municipal bankruptcy ever,” argue panelists at the American Enterprise Institute.

News

Tuition Economics

There is no such thing as “free quality education” because the financial burden of that education must either be placed on the taxpayer or fulfilled through private sources such as tuition dollars.

News

Soldier in the Rain

Michael Chertoff admits that three and a half years after Hurricane Katrina, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) he heads still falls short from protecting the American national structures from natural disasters.