Year One in Review
No amount of goofy smiles, Facebook videos, or gauche clichés – we’re the greatest country in the world – by Mr Luxon is going to restore foreign investor confidence
No amount of goofy smiles, Facebook videos, or gauche clichés – we’re the greatest country in the world – by Mr Luxon is going to restore foreign investor confidence
Discover more about the policies that shaped a decade of hardship – and the lessons they hold for today.
The Thanksgiving menu isn’t the only conversation starter. Add in North Korea posturing against the US and the battle in the halls of Congress over bathroom rights and the kitchen table discussion just got interesting.
The Houthi threat warrants serious attention because the group undermines the principle of freedom of navigation, a cornerstone of global stability.
Some climate conference decisions were laughable. Makes you wonder why we bother. Nothing’s changing.
Jacinda Ardern would never, ever have spoken those words.
At the DOE, Mr Wright can help make way for more oil and gas pipelines. These and other steps can reestablish Mr Trump’s vision of American energy dominance.
Be prepared to see numerous fawning pieces from mainstream media outlets that present him as a demigod.
A chainsaw for bureaucracy. Too many politicians don’t really understand economics, but Milei clearly does.
Don’t apply to Finance Minister Nicola Willis’ Social Investment Agency. It’s a PR scam.
If it doesn’t ‘scream and bleed’ politically, it won’t likely make a dent in achieving the $2 trillion goal. There is just plain nothing antiseptic about slashing the Federal budget.
Some aspects of Trump’s immigration policy have the potential for fueling further expansion of a federal police state.
By developing skills and strategies to live freely and independently, libertarians can pursue personal autonomy and minimise their susceptibility to control by others, particularly the government.
It turns out that medical freedom, food freedom, free speech, political freedom, and peace all go together. Who knew?
It’s my hope that Trump will finally break the cycle of ignoring our looming debt issues. The proposals of the Late Scholastics would be a great place to start.