According to Nicholas Eberstadt, an American Enterprise Institute scholar, journalists and policy makers will likely find that next year’s census report poverty statistics are arbitrary to the true economic state of America’s poorest citizens.
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Conservatism’s Obituary Premature
The conservative cause may well have taken a beating at the polls last month, but it certainly is not and cannot be dead.
Congress Buries History
The U.S. Capitol unveiled what one congressman has called a “$600 million godless pit,” a palatial underground visitors’ center which is at the heart of an ongoing debate over the place of America’s religious heritage in the nation’s capital.
Asia In Red Zone
For decades the world has known of the blatant violations of human rights by the Red Chinese and Vietnamese governments.
Ivory Tower Hero
William Ayers hasn’t given up railing against authority figures in the four decades following his time with the Weather Underground.
Teaching as a Martial Art
Inner city teachers have long talked of getting “combat pay” for teaching in troubled schools but now they are taking the military analogy to a whole new level.
Chicago Gay School Closeted
A Chicago public school district will not be building a “gay” high school in their area next year.
Special Ed for Journalists
If medical schools matched up with the practice of medicine in the way in which journalistic training preps reporters for careers in journalism, patients would be dropping like flies.
Youthful Election Postmortem
With two of every three young voters under 30 years old voting for Barack Obama, a great deal has been made of the 2008 youth vote in recent weeks.
Values Voters Betrayed?
Moderating, PBS’ Kim Lawton asked for clarity on the role faith and religion had played in the quest for the White House, what impact it had on voters and what the results may mean for the future of the role of faith in American politics.