Can Gas Repair What Pols Can’t Between Turkey and Israel?

Turkey and Israel have drifted apart in recent years for all sorts of reasons, a trend only exacerbated by the ugly anti-Semitic statements made by the Turkish deputy prime minister and state-affiliated media over the summer. These tensions have been an impediment to the development of a pipeline that would carry Israel’s new bounty of offshore gas […]

Is Greece Turning into Weimar Germany?

Last Friday, two members of Greece’s far-right Golden Dawn party were killed in a drive-by shooting directly outside the party’s headquarters near Athens. Although nobody knows yet who was behind the shooting, it comes about two month after an anti-fascist hip-hop musician was stabbed to death by a Golden Dawn supporter, and just after the […]

Germany and Brazil Gang Up At The UN

After five years of a president who was going to rebuild trust with key allies in Europe and with important rising powers like Brazil, this is where we are: Brazil and Germany are jointly sponsoring a resolution to the floor of the UN General Assembly condemning invasions of privacy. The resolution doesn’t name names, but […]

Castro’s Culture War

After sixty years of socialist revolution in Cuba, it appears that the proletariat still prefer vile capitalist entertainment to socially uplifting official films. Raul Castro is having none of it. He sent out a decree shutting down scores of private movie and video game parlors run out of the backs of officially-sanctioned restaurants. The BBC: […]

Why We Need a New Pendleton Act

The botched rollout of healthcare.gov shows why the US desperately needs reform of its public sector.

Week in Review

This week, we took a look at how mass immigration in Europe is posing a serious threat to the welfare states that most of the continent has been building for the past half-century: Europe’s social engineers of the last generation seem to have assumed that the “dark forces” of nationalism and chauvinism had been left […]

Greens Starting to See Nuclear’s Merit

Over the weekend, four leading climate scientists begged the green movement to see reason on nuclear energy. The group—which included the scientist cum-activist who ominously (and wrongly) predicted that developing Canadian tar sands oil would be “game over” for the planet—sent a letter to a number of green groups making the case for the latest […]

Photo of the Week

WASHINGTON, DC – OCTOBER 30: U.S. Army Gen. Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency and commander of U.S. Cyber Command, speaks during a conference at the Ronald Reagan Building, October 30,2013 in Washington, DC. General Alexander spoke about Cybersecurity at a conference hosted by Bloomberg Government. Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images.

Obamacare Website Doomed by Bureaucratic Inexperience and Fear of GOP

From the day Obamacare was passed, Obama knew that getting the website up and running would be the key to the success of the law, and likely his presidency. Yet for the next two years, he and his team were completely unprepared for the task of actually getting it done, leaving us with the mess […]

62% of South Koreans View Japan as Credible Military Threat

The Asan Institute for Policy Studies, a think tank in Seoul, released a troubling new poll this week that found serious levels of agitation and distrust for Japan among South Koreans. The poll asked one thousand South Korean adults if they felt “militarily threatened” by Japan, and 62 percent said yes. The political relationship between the […]

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