RFK Jr. Pays Lip Service to the Debt While Pushing Policies That Would Increase It
It's good to hear a candidate actually talk about our spending problem. But his campaign promises would exacerbate it.
It's good to hear a candidate actually talk about our spending problem. But his campaign promises would exacerbate it.
The president who helped end America’s longest war now regrets leaving behind U.S. bases.
The U.S. has successfully navigated past debt challenges, notably in the 1990s. Policymakers can fix this if they find the will to do so.
Those three presidential candidates are making promises that would have bewildered and horrified the Founding Fathers.
The surveillance company mSpy just suffered its third data breach in a decade, exposing government officials snooping for both official and unofficial reasons.
War and peace are the most important decisions a country can make. No politician wants to level with Americans about it.
The Dirty Jobs host talks about patriotism, history, and his new movie for Independence Day 2024.
We could grow our way out of our debt burden if politicians would limit spending increases to just below America's average yearly economic growth. But they won't even do that.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about the Selective Service.
Washington keeps getting caught pushing the kind of disinformation it claims to oppose.
The Selective Service should be abolished, not made more efficient and equitable.
Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller advocated the plan this week, which Trump later called a "ridiculous idea."
The reaction to Ramzan Daraev’s death is an extreme example of anti-immigrant panic and national security paranoia.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren condemned Israel for killing Palestinian civilians with bombs that she had voted to send Israel.
Bureaucrats in cubicles will kill more people than Terminator robots will.
The Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Glenn Greenwald takes on famed lawyer and author Alan Dershowitz.
Plus: Taiwan heats up, Robert Moses and Rockaway Beach, CBDCs, and more...
Cyber intrusions, arson, bombings, and other mayhem feature in the conflict between West and East.
Total spending under Trump nearly doubled. New programs filled Washington with more bureaucrats.
Elica Le Bon, an attorney and Iranian-American activist, talks about Iran's recent strike on Israel on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Many of the Washington hawks calling for war with Iran had sworn up and down that more pressure was not a path to war.
Increased spending does not automatically equate to higher quality—something that is often lost in this debate.
President Biden said that we will “do all we can to protect Israel’s security” after Israel killed an Iranian general.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for examples of left-leaning thinkers who also hold libertarian ideas.
The U.S. is dispensing munitions to Ukraine and Israel faster than they can be replaced.
The U.S. is dispensing munitions to Ukraine and Israel faster than they can be replaced.
Economic nationalists are claiming the deal endangers "national security" to convince Americans that a good deal for investors, employees, and the U.S. economy will somehow make America less secure. That's nonsense.
The new Nigerien military government has ordered U.S. forces out of their expensive air base.
It took the Air Force four years to release redacted records of its quest to create spiffy new uniforms for the newest branch of the military.
Jack Teixeira shared documents on the war in Ukraine to a gamer group on Discord.
The airlift avoids the real problems causing starvation.
It's just one reason the program should likely be terminated altogether.
Listening to the sounds of war at the site of the October 7 Hamas attack.
Reagan's former budget director says Donald Trump killed prosperity—and the GOP's core beliefs in capitalism and freedom.
Plus: Trump vows a costlier trade war, Elon Musk's brain implant, and more...
The U.S. base on the Jordanian-Syrian border has long been "strategic baggage."
Plus: Inheritance taxes, lady gadgets, a stabbing in South Korea, and more...
Lawmakers can take small steps that are uncontroversial and bipartisan to jumpstart the fiscal stability process.
Section 702 will continue until April, when Congress will have another shot at seriously reforming a program that desperately needs it.
Competing FISA Section 702 reauthorization bills will reach the House floor next week, Speaker Johnson says.
Plus: an unexpected digression into the world of Little Debbie dessert snack cakes.