Paul Rahe, a scholar of ancient military history, finds contemporary parallels. But where’s our Gylippus?
The Saturday Interview
Israeli statesman Natan Sharansky on the 2005 Gaza withdrawal, the Palestinians’ prospects for democracy, Ukraine and the Russia-Iran axis.
To achieve its objectives in Gaza and secure the Jewish state, Jerusalem needs to turn the tables on Tehran.
The eminent economist faults intellectuals who expect equal outcomes and treat individuals as if they were mere ‘chess pieces.’
Moshe Koppel’s Kohelet Forum takes on judges, bureaucrats and the legacy of socialism to build a more democratic, free and Jewish state.
Bill Helman’s and Roland Fryer’s real-world experiment tests whether capitalism can be harnessed to improve income mobility.
Why do so many corporate leaders accept the false premises of global warming catastrophism?
The former President ‘can’t win’ the 2024 election, the former New Jersey governor says. ‘He will probably be out on bail in four different jurisdictions.’
He has emerged as an important justice with a distinctive interpretive method that is pragmatic yet rooted in originalism and textualism.
North Dakota’s governor on his presidential bid, the politics of energy, and why he prefers to stay out of the culture wars.
Katharine Birbalsingh, principal of a ‘free school,’ says identity politics makes it hard to educate minority youths.
An old-fashioned liberal, Tony Lyons welcomes authors from Woody Allen to Alex Jones and topics from 2020 election fraud to a defense of Venezuela.
The former Vice President says he differs with ‘my former running mate’ on entitlements, Ukraine and abortion. He also believes American voters have a ‘hunger’ for civility.
The left fought to stop welfare reform and failed. Now they want us to forget the law’s success. But Robert Doar remembers.
The great strategist sees a globe riven by U.S.-China competition and threatened by fearsome new weapons and explains why he now thinks Ukraine should be in NATO.
Historian William Inboden considers the Cold War’s lessons for today’s Republican Party.
Gabrielius Landsbergis, the Baltic nation’s foreign minister, explains why his country never bought into ‘the end of history’ and what Ukraine and Taiwan have in common.
The author of the Dobbs abortion ruling answers attacks on the court’s ‘legitimacy.’ He says he thinks he knows who leaked the draft and is certain about the motive.
In an effort to delegitimate the Supreme Court, left-leaning journalists libel him as a Nazi sympathizer.
Martin Cooper, the man who made the first call on a handheld device, reflects on how the technology has changed the world—and the advances still to come.
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