Should Muslims Really Welcome Denmark’s Proposed Anti-Blasphemy Law?
Mustafa Akyol Tension is growing in Sweden and Denmark, and in much of the Muslim world, because
1.8 Million in Employment-Based Green Card Backlog
David J. Bier The employment‐based green card backlog reached a new record of 1.8 million cases this year.
U.S. Allowing Weapons Customers to Commit Crimes Against Humanity on the Saudi-Yemen Border
Jordan Cohen and Jonathan Ellis Allen President Joe Biden wants to sign a security agreement with Saudi Arabia
Sweden during the Pandemic: Pariah or Paragon?
Johan Norberg During the pandemic, it seemed like the world was watching and worrying about Sweden, because
Cato Report: Zero Chance of Being Killed by Terrorist Who Crossed U.S. Border Illegally, 1975-2022
Michael Chapman Among many interesting facts in a new Cato Institute report, Terrorism and Immigration, is that between
Right to Financial Privacy Act Fails to Protect People’s Privacy, Again
Nicholas Anthony Bank of America is at the center of an ongoing January 6 investigation. Yet not
Does Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment Disqualify Trump?
Walter Olson Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits anyone who has previously taken an oath of office
Larry Summers’ Comparison of 2013–23 Inflation with 1966–76 Is Uninformed Madness
Alan Reynolds Larry Summers, former Director of the National Economic Council for President Obama, recently wrote a Washington
Four GOP Presidential Candidates Say They’ll Close Education Department—That’s Good Policy
Michael Chapman Republicans have been promising to shut down the federal Department of Education ever since it
Unleashing Innovation in Light of U.S.-China Competition
Clark Packard and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon Technology and innovation are at the forefront of the geostrategic competition