There may actually be a part of the Pentagon’s budget that advocates of a strong defense want to cut. Naturally, it has precious little to do with taking up arms to defend America and a lot to do with feathering the already plush nests of universities.
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Making a Federal Case
In a study documenting the total number of federal crimes within United States law, researchers have found that there has been a major increase in the definition of such offenses since the founding of the nation in 1776.
Israel, Ireland, and International Law
Both Israel’s airstrike on Syria and Ireland’s rejection of the Lisbon Treaty exemplify a fundamental debate every nation must have—globalism vs. nationalism.
Stanford, Schatzberg, and Corcept Therapeutics
Stanford’s account of Dr. Schatzberg’s arm’s-length role in Stanford’s NIH-supported studies of RU 486 (mifepristone) for depression is questionable, if not disingenuous.
Of Witches, Warlocks, Jesuits, and Obama
Jesuits at the Univesity of San Francisco have apparently found a new meaning for ecumenical.
The Biblical Sense
The general editor of the Bible Literacy Project responds to criticism of same that appeared in this space.
We Shall Overeat
Academia has latched onto a new and powerful victim group by introducing “Fat Studies” on several American campuses.
Mental Health Crisis
What the campus Women’s Resource Center may not tell you about abortion.
The First Black President?
The rise of Barack Obama on the national political scene has inevitably rejuvenated a debate as to who was the first black President.
Ode To a Lost Decade
“The 1990’s witnessed a major transformation in the discourse of theory, with the rise of new figures, a shift in the works of others, and a new sexuality,” said University of Florida Professor Phillip Wegner.