In the May 2011 issue of The American Conservative, a Georgetown professor debates himself and both sides of the debate lose.
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School Boards Shun Unions
Even more so than the recent defeats in states such as Wisconsin, a sure sign of the declining influence of teacher unions is the distance that school boards are putting between themselves and the union reps.
When Teachers Behave Badly
It would have been easy to mistake Wisconsin’s unions for an angry third-world mob.
Revisionist Analysis of Wisconsin Crisis
Wisconsin’s government unions may be losing support with the public but they might have picked up at least one academic supporter.
Al-Jazeera’s Double Exposure
The nation’s premier journalism school points to the Al-Jazeera TV network as a model for modern-day reporters.
Governors Score Obamacare
As the debate continues on national health care, the U. S. House Energy and Commerce Committee convened to question expert witnesses – Governors from Mississippi, Massachusetts and Utah – on alternatives to Obamacare.
Nurturing the Threat?
The Obama Administration and Technology Transfer to China
Rumsfeld Returns
In an effort to promote his new book, Known and Unknown: A Memoir, former US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, facilitated a discussion with conservative supporters and colleagues.
Holding Out For A Hero
What do Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, William Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all have in common?
Muslim Brotherhood’s Ennui Corner
If you want to find out about the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood on American college campuses, let alone in the Middle East, you are looking at one of the few sites which attempt to provide it.