Opinion Journal
Wage discrimination is already illegal. So what? Get ready for another phony debate.
Despite economic success and growing regional influence, Chinese leaders are profoundly insecure.
As protests against him rise and his popularity falls, the Bolivian president nationalizes another big company.
At America's top schools, graduates leave without reading our most basic writings on the purpose of constitutional self-government.
James Grant on the Federal Reserve's misguided fear of deflation.
GOP Congressmen sign up for energy crony capitalism.
In "Uncontrolled," Jim Manzi asks whether the principles and methods used in scientific experiments be applied to business and social policy. Trevor Butterworth reviews.
Lyndon Johnson's famed biographer talks about what he's learned studying America's 36th President and Robert Moses.
Fixed exchange rates are especially unforgiving of welfare states that destroy their ability to create wealth.
The labor participation rate is back where it was in December 1981.
The runway bird nests may finally go.
Renewable fuel mandates are raising electricity prices in the states.
Do the math on dividend taxes. Yields lower, stock prices lower—maybe by 30%.
The horrific London metro attacks of 2005 were almost reprised in New York in September 2009.
Ron Paul and Paul Krugman on the Great Depression, the Federal Reserve and fraud.
What affirmation action actually affirms.
Fine, fast or frozen, American food is so much better than it was. Henry Allen reviews three biographies of men who changed the way we eat.
In "Solar Dance," Modris Eksteins examines one of the 20th-century's most famous counterfeit cases: a cache of fake Van Goghs that Berlin art dealer Otto Wacker released into the market. Hugh Eakin reviews.
In "Engines of Change," Paul Ingrassia writes about automobiles that swept the American imagination at various periods. Joseph Epstein reviews.
Author Leo Braudy on books about the world's movie capital, from its beginnings as a dusty outpost for silent-movie production, through the gaudy century that followed, to the present, when a slow resurrection is underway.
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