Jan - Feb 2001
By Dennis T. Avery | February 1, 2001
By Douglas Bailey | February 1, 2001
By John Clark | February 1, 2001
Internal discord is tearing away at several Eurasian countries.
By Joseph Epstein | February 1, 2001
By Albert From | February 1, 2001
By Michael Fumento | February 1, 2001
By Evan Gahr | February 1, 2001
Michael Chabon, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (New York: Random House, 2000), 736 pages, $26.95
By James K Glassman | February 1, 2001
The political cornerstone of America's economic future is the nation's rising investor class.
By Steven Greydanus | February 1, 2001
By Robert Hormats | February 1, 2001
By Kevin Hurley | February 1, 2001
Philip Pullman, The Amber Spyglass (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000), 518 pages, $19.95
By Kevin Hurley | February 1, 2001
By Jason Hutchens | February 1, 2001
By S. T. Karnick | February 1, 2001
By Lawrence Kudlow | February 1, 2001
To counter slumping economic growth and enhance their reelection prospects, Congress and the next administration need to move fast on bipartisan tax reform and encourage a less restrictive monetary policy.
By Jonathan Little | February 1, 2001
Without control over their product, record companies and artists must now dance to their customers' tunes.
By Herbert I. London | February 1, 2001
By Herbert I. London | February 1, 2001
From the January/February 2001 American Outlook
By Betsy McCaughey | February 1, 2001
Substituting nurses for doctors can be hazardous to your health.
By Mark Mellman | February 1, 2001
By Lawrence Parks | February 1, 2001
As Daniel Webster noted,
By William Paxon | February 1, 2001
By Richard N. Perle | February 1, 2001
Leftover assumptions from the Cold War hamstring America's national defense planning.
By Jan Rosenberg | February 1, 2001
Linda J. Waite and Maggie Gallagher, The Case for Marriage: Why Married People Are Happier, Healthier, and Better Off Financially (New York: Doubleday, 2000), 260 pages, $24.95
By Edwin S. Rubenstein | February 1, 2001
The "new economy" does not guarantee ever-rising stock prices. But that doesn't mean there's a stock market bubble, either.
By Alan Skrainka | February 1, 2001
By Christina Hoff Sommers | February 1, 2001
Neil Howe and William Strauss, Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation (New York: Vintage Books, 2000), 415 pages, $14.00
By Anthony Spina | February 1, 2001
Attempts to replace crumbling real communities with virtual, cyberspace ones may actually exacerbate tribalism and social conflict.
By Richard Thomas | February 1, 2001
By Gregory Valliere | February 1, 2001
By Kenneth R. Weinstein | February 1, 2001
By Marshall Wittmann | February 1, 2001