The author of The Art of the Deal should consider the possibility that no deal at all is the best deal for America.
Steve Byas at New American
The author of The Art of the Deal should consider the possibility that no deal at all is the best deal for America.
The movie portrays the notorious architect of the Final Solution as both a monster and a human being, teaching us a powerful lesson about limiting the power of government.
Arizona and Maine have recently rejected the National Popular Vote organization's scheme to gut our Electoral College, but constitutionalists should not let down their guard.
One has to question the sincerity of the media's supposed admiration of the late Senator John McCain, considering how they treated him when he dared to oppose Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential campaign.
The Democrats decide to limit the role of the superdelegates — and democratic socialist Bernie Sanders is all for it.
The movement to "celebrate" abortion gets a big push from Oprah Winfrey.
Trump’s comparison of Special Counsel Robert Mueller to the late Senator Joseph McCarthy is certainly unfair — to McCarthy.
The Q "conspiracy" phenomena on the Internet raises a larger question: Are all conspiracy theories just bunk, or could some of them be true?
Though free trade — really trade managed by an entity empowered to change countries’ laws — is portrayed as an unalloyed “good,” America’s influential Founders disagreed.
While players in NFL uniforms use disrespect for the flag to protest, South Florida cops in uniform have decided they can spend their enterainment dollars elsewhere.
If you like our present Constitution, you might have to reject the advocacy of some “conservatives” who want a so-called Convention of the States that could write a brand new one, more in line with what the Left wants.
It is doubtful very many fans buy NFL tickets or watch a game to watch political activity, but players keep protesting the country at games anyway.
Modern Jacobin socialists apparently share with their French Revolution's namesakes a desire to replace their country's existing Constitution.
They battled furiously for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016, but do Trump and Cruz now have a mutual interest in Cruz's reelection?
The attack on Trump's star in West Hollywood's Walk of Fame is just the latest piece of evidence that some on the Left would silence all conservative talk if they could get away with it.
A demand that the United States is making in the NAFTA talks to raise wages in Mexico is a powerful demonstration that such government-managed trade deals are antagonistic to both free enterprise and national sovereignty.
Dinesh D'Souza has produced another cinematic assault upon the Democratic Party, this time providing some important history neglected by the Left's history books.
Governor Jerry "Moonbeam" Brown strikes again, arguing that the heat is worse than it was "10,000 years ago" when civilization supposedly began. But Brown is wrong. Civilization did not emerge until about 5,000 years ago or less, and the Earth has warmed and cooled many times, long before modern human industrial activity.
That the FBI would continue to use the "hate" designations of the radical leftist Southern Poverty Law Center is troubling.