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http://online.wsj.com/page/2_0006.html
Updated:
9 hours 43 min ago
Mike Johnson has become clear on the stakes but Joe Biden’s waffle on war aims can’t continue much longer.
Biden gets the restraint he wanted, but Tehran’s menace persists, especially its nuclear program.
Perhaps it’s always darkest before the cultural dawn.
Limits on ownership by institutional investors would curtail investment in the state’s homes.
A toothless task force and other measures haven’t stopped antisemitism from flourishing on campus.
The American porn-star trial, the tawdry British memoirs—all signal weakness and decadence.
Europe has become a hostile environment for energy companies.
Among seniors with $50,000 to $99,999 in savings, 86% were doing OK or living comfortably.
They say they want to make Congress work. They insist on rules that ensure it can’t.
Oil and gas are doing more for the economy than his climate dreams.
Raised a Quaker, he professed a civic faith in which God and America were fused.
The Speaker puts his job on the line, in a welcome show of leadership.
The government ignored its own medical experts on transplant tests.
A case study in why voters distrust Europe’s liberal elites.
Spooked by disruption, candidates give in to the temptations of industrial policy and protectionism.
‘I thought any trial Trump faced before 2024 should be about the election. This case, however, is about the election—albeit the one in 2016, not 2020.’
Voters smell the politics of prosecutions.
Set during the early months of the pandemic, writer-director Theda Hammel’s feature debut stars John Early as a Brooklyn man taking care of his injured nephew.
The central bank owes the public an explanation—and a serious effort to correct its flawed model.
It would send shock waves across the globe, make China and Iran bolder, and endanger NATO.
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