Wall Street Journal
Greece displays the post-liberal variety, Egypt the pre-liberal one. Both are rotten.
I don't want more options. I want fewer options.
A new study shows that political activism helps returns to shareholders.
The Supreme Court takes down another Obama legal claim.
Signs of disorder grow as American influence recedes.
The attorney general has it coming, but the answer isn't a special prosecutor.
Our study shows that four countries should get the boot, while Norway, Malaysia, Singapore and Switzerland should join.
Expect Russia and Turkey to drift away from the West. NATO will be a loser too.
Jason Riley examines whether illegal immigrants take American jobs.
The "sounds of slogging" echo through the decades.
Gov. Christie's ability to make the case for reform—and to defend his positions bluntly—has endeared him to GOP donors. James Freeman reviews "Chris Christie" by Bob Ingle and Michael Symons.
When supermarket magnate Ricardo Martinelli became president in 2009, free-marketeers celebrated, but the honeymoon was short-lived.
The Germans might have preferred a victory by the left in Athens.
Sixteen Senate Republicans, including Marco Rubio, vote to preserve the sugar quota program.
The subsidy program has strayed far from its origins.
Steven Greenhut on California's latest good-government scheme.
Should ObamaCare be overturned by the Supreme Court, insurers have solutions ready to go.
Much like the Soviet Union in its final years, the Saudis are likely to pass the crown from one old man to another.
Today the medical-device industry flourishes overseas, even as it struggles under unnecessary regulatory burdens in the U.S.
Leaked documents show a real threat to the international flow of information.
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