China is considering developing technology to liquefy natural gas at sea, so that it does not have to build costly and difficult-to-defend undersea pipelines. In completely unrelated news, there is lots of natural gas in the disputed waters of the South China Sea.
OECD data shows that health care spending is slowing down worldwide. While we still don’t know all the reasons why its happening, new medical technologies are playing a key role.
A new CBO report finds that the health care slowdown could give Medicare six more years of life. But this very limited piece of good news is further complicated by the fact we have no idea what caused it.
The debate about Obama’s foreign policy is not if it is working or it is is not; everyone agrees it is not working. It’s about whether there is anything Obama can do about it.
Japanese regulators declared one of the country’s nuclear facilities ready for a restart, the first such preliminary approval since the 2011 Fukushima disaster. Still, questions remain over the safety of siting nuclear power plants in the island nation.
The recent move by 100 Kansas Republican leaders to endorse GOP Governor Sam Brownback’s Democratic opponent seems like a rebuke of the national GOP’s priorities. But factors unique to Kansas may make it hard to extrapolate any national lessons.
New accounts of parents being punished for leaving their children unattended are rightly drawing ire from observers across the political spectrum. The child welfare bureaucracy has been growing stronger for quite some time, and now has the power to remove children from their families more easily than you might think.
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