Wall Street Journal
Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal's choice and tenure changes could be a national milestone.
The Secret Service's unhappy Colombia hook-ups.
Americans don't want to live in Ray LaHood's car-free utopia.
In "Cosmic Constitutional Theory," J. Harvie Wilkinson III, a federal judge, argues that theories about interpreting the Constitution are too often merely attempts to disguise judicial activism and to give cover to partisan results. Adam J. White reviews.
Fraser Nelson on how Anders Borg has revived Sweden's economy by cutting taxes.
One city is letting local business lead the revival, the other is imposing top-down rules and waiting for FEMA. Guess which one is rebuilding faster?
Roger Scruton, Britain's foremost conservative philosopher, offers a traditionalist manifesto to discomfit both the left and American free-marketeers.
The missile may have fizzled, but so did American policy.
What about piracy, low barriers to entry and the fact that literature isn't chopped liver?
Western companies have provided the technology that enables Tehran's Internet censorship.
It turns out this Obama proposal will cost federal revenue.
The marriage tax and other obstacles to economic progress.
Josh Kraushaar on a survey showing independent voters more interested in economic growth than in 'fairness.'
A new history of the Spanish civil war pays special attention to the violence perpetrated by Francoists. Stanley G. Payne reviews "The Spanish Holocaust."
Philip Larkin's poems are a protest against the limits of time, says David Mason.
In "Horseshoe Crabs and Velvet Worms," Richard Fortey presents his observations on a diverse collection of organisms, from bacteria to musk oxen, that share a conspicuous number of features with the earliest of their fossil ancestors. Jennie Erin Smith reviews.
Feminism's latest triumph: Boys are afraid of girls.
Author Richard Mason on books that memorably depict those who dare—in realms of love, power, society and elsewhere.
Each one of his rivals offers a clue to victory in November.
The GOP still practices primogeniture, but much else has changed in politics.
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