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Stanford Law Dean’s Letter Responding to Student Complaints—Part 1

In a 10-page letter to students yesterday, Stanford law school dean Jenny S. Martinez responded further to questions about the disruption of Judge Kyle...

This Will Deflate the College Bubble Some More

The absurd mania for college degrees that prevailed until just a few years ago is clearly waning.

This Day in Liberal Judicial Activism—March 23

1970—By a vote of 5 to 3, the Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Brennan, rules in Goldberg v. Kelly that the Constitution...

Colorado Progressives Use Courts to Take Radical Climate Agenda National

If Boulder prevails, public-nuisance lawsuits could be used to reshape the energy sector.

The Death of the ‘Reagan Republican’

The party struggles to conserve what’s best about it.

SVB Was Killed by Incompetence and Showiness, Not Wokeness

There is a cousin to wokeness lurking in Silicon Valley Bank’s failure. We used to call that cousin the ‘cool factor.’

Trump team raises $1.5 million as indictment looms

Former President Donald Trump hasn't been arrested, but his team is raising money off the prospect that he could be.

Biden to use Obamacare anniversary to ding GOP budget plans

President Biden will mark Obamacare's 13th anniversary on Thursday by highlighting coverage gains while accusing the GOP of plotting to chip away at the landmark program's benefits.

Biden approval dips near lowest point: AP-NORC poll

Approval of President Biden has dipped slightly since a month ago, nearing the lowest point of his presidency as his administration tries to project a sense of stability while confronting a pair of bank failures and inflation that remains stubbornly high.

Iraq in 2023 is a very different place to 2003 Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq — The Iraqi capital in 2023 is far different from Baghdad in 2003. Ramadi and Fallujah, once the hotbed of insurgency, are not only peaceful but also booming with construction and commerce. Sectarianism is, at least among the 50% of the population born after the war, in the rearview mirror. The parking lots of Baghdad’s malls and shopping centers are full of cars from Iraqi Kurdistan, predominantly Shi'ite southern Iraq, and largely Sunni al Anbar province. Baghdadis from across the religious and ethnic spectrum flock to the new cafes and restaurants that open on a daily basis.

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