latest
Today in Oklahoma, parents fall into two camps. One camp has the financial resources to move to another school district or independently pay for private school if a local district isn’t working out for their child. The other camp must endure problems and hope things somehow improve because those families don’t have the finances to get their children out of a geographically assigned school.
Read more[James Jay Carafano, a leading expert in national security and foreign policy challenges, is The Heritage Foundation’s vice president for foreign and defense policy studies, E. W. Richardson fellow, and director of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies.]
Read more80 million acres in the Gulf of Mexico was leased recently by the U.S. government to a number of oil and gas producers for oil and gas exploration. The Biden administration had tried to stop this leasing, but they were ordered by the courts to proceed with the leasing after being sued by the gulf states and others. The leasing of these acres would likely have resulted in the production of millions of barrels of U.S. oil, helping us to return to the energy independence we had under President Trump, and the national security that energy independence brings with it.
Read moreMany conservatives seem to think a change in the nation’s leadership is a certainty with this year’s congressional elections.
Read moreGen. Michael Flynn is calling out the cast of characters that has pushed the United States onto the precipice of a potentially annihilating war with Russia.
Read moreDoes America indeed have a two-tiered justice system?
Read moreAmong the many unbridgeable divides between Americans is a completely antithetical view of mask wearing. On one side are those who wear masks almost everywhere outside their homes and who demand that others do so, including young children in class and on outdoor playgrounds, and 2-year-olds on airplanes.
Read moreNow almost two years since the COVID-19 pandemic began, and after $6.6 trillion in total federal spending on it—the equivalent of $51,600 per household— some policymakers want to pass yet another so-called COVID-19 relief package.
Read more