A Different Kind of Big Stick
The president certainly isn’t afraid to use the military, but that isn’t the only cudgel he wields.
The president certainly isn’t afraid to use the military, but that isn’t the only cudgel he wields.
Australians are more likely to be victims of violent crime than Americans: much more, in fact.
There is no libertarian justification for doing nothing about coercion merely because it is occurring in another country. Coercion should always be our concern, wherever it occurs.
Rodney Hide fired up Grok to present a counter view to Michael Bassett.
Adults siphon off taxpayer money earmarked for kids, and no one is held accountable. Teachers’ unions share the same dysfunctional incentives as headline-grabbing fraudsters in Minnesota.
It’s not that these people are stupid. It’s that the rules they preach are for you, not for them.
A Trump doctrine that aims at nullifying the most dangerous threats to US security would help accomplish this.
The DOJ’s investigation is ugly politics, but we might welcome a test of whether central bankers are subject to the same oversight as everyone else.
Barrett and his team raced back to the Washington Monument to feed a copy of the 19-minute show, about two terabytes of data, into four servers. “The pivot from shooting furniture to counting myself as being seen by 400 million people, or whatever the most recent numbers are, is mind boggling.”
But it’s rational Americans – regardless of political affiliation – who should be angry: angry that the people destroying America act like they’re the victims when their own policies produce the chaos.
Is war with China Trump’s plan? I doubt it. But it would be remiss not to point this out.
What does all this mean for New Zealand? Unsurprisingly and happily, America’s National Security Strategy makes no mention of New Zealand. It would be great if the US forgot about us entirely in a situation where we have no obvious enemies, unless of course we choose to ally ourselves with the US.