Politics

Sorry, Democrats: Rural Hospitals Aren’t at Risk from Trump’s Reforms | National Review
Far from endangering rural hospitals, President Trump and Republicans in Congress are helping them by fixing a broken Medicaid system. Source link
England’s Arrest of Graham Linehan Was an Act of Calculated Tyranny | National Review
The country’s illiberalism toward speech about transgenderism shocks even me. Source link
The Genocide Lie Is Back | National Review
A new resolution condemning Israel is about as marred as the process that produced it. Source link
The Tariff Power Still Belongs Only to Congress | National Review
Trump lost the case on his tariffs because only Congress has the power to tax. Source link
President Trump Is Right to Fight European Tech Overreach | National Review
The Old World model of state management must not be permitted to hold back the advance of the freedom-fueled dynamism of the New World. Source link
Institutionalize the Mentally Ill Homeless | National Review
Forcing people into treatment would raise the ACLU’s hackles, but it’s the only compassionate solution for people who cannot care for themselves. Source link
Time to Force Putin to the Negotiating Table | National Review
He is clearly trying to play President Trump by talking peace while waging war. He will find that a very dangerous game. Source link
Taylor Lorenz Has the Goods (Really) on the Left’s Paid Online Influencers | National Review
There is an invisible world out there, a hidden hand, and it is driven by money. Source link
Trump Is Right to Take On the Federal-Worker Unions | National Review
Labor Day should honor laborers, not unions. Source link
Celebrating the Decline of Big Labor | National Review
For the first time, the share of U.S. workers who are union members has fallen below 10 percent. Source link
Management’s Favorite Unions Don’t March for Everyone  | National Review
This Labor Day, listen to the workers whom union officials have left behind. Source link
High Adventure Is Still Good Business | National Review
One hundred and fifty years since his birth, Edgar Rice Burroughs has a lasting literary legacy that lives beyond his own work. Source link