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James Ceaser is the Harry F. Byrd Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia, director of the Program for Constitutionalism and Democracy, and was a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author of several books on American politics and American political thought, including...
On The FISA Court And “Rubber Stamping”
In preparing for a lecture that I need to give that includes a discussion of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, I once again came across the (true) claim that the FISA court (FISC) denies only a miniscule fraction of the requests made of it by the Justice Department.
Samuel Tadros On The John Batchelor Show (9:22)
Samuel Tadros, a contributor to the Herbert and Jane Dwight Working Group on Islamism and the International Order, weighs in on the turbulent changes in Egypt and the effects on the Coptic Christians.
Beyond Human Rights Rituals A Case for State-Nation Specific Negotiation Of UNDRIP Implementation
Tod Lindberg, research fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, argues that Posner’s historical analysis is essentially wrong, “International human-rights law is good and useful not because it compels, which it mostly can’t, but because it inspires.”
“You Built Your Own Monument”
General James Mattis speaks to his fellow vets.
The 'Commerce Clause Mandate'
The Contraception Hawks
Let BBC Viewers Decide If They Want More Golf Or Grenades
James Harding wants more overseas coverage to counter state-run channels in China and Russia. But the Foreign Office isn’t paying for that any more.
Big Government As The New Terminator
Social observers from Aristotle and Juvenal to James Madison and George Orwell have all warned of the dangers of out-of-control government. Lately, we have seen plenty of proof that they were frighteningly correct.
How I Found My Inner Warrior At A 'Man Camp' Retreat
James Innes-Smith toughs it out at a 'man improvement' camp to see if he can rediscover his masculinity and navigate a new way forward for his gender.
Douglass North, 1920-2015
Many great economists live long lives. James Buchanan, Milton Friedman, F.A. Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, and Gordon Tullock all lived into their nineties.
Questions For Apple
The House Judiciary Committee at 1:00 pm is holding a hearing at which FBI Director James Comey and Apple General Counsel Bruce Sewell will both testify on going dark matters. Here's the live video.
Is It Time To Regulate Google As A Public Utility?
The firing of James Damore has raised questions not only about Google’s internal tolerance but about whether it should be trusted to filter the entire internet.
An End To Racial Preferences At Last?
The Supreme Court could be ready to rule that racial discrimination is illegal, even if it is purportedly done for a good cause.
More On The Free-Exercise Clause And Religious Exemptions
Despite a pair of recent responses by Ramesh Ponnuru and another by Professor Vincent Philip Muñoz, we continue to view the original understanding of the Constitution’s free-exercise clause to require exemptions to otherwise generally applicable laws except under certain conditions, such as harm to individuals, danger to the public, or the infringement of equal rights.
'He's Become A Comic Figure': Victor Davis Hanson On Comey Denying Blame, Ripping Fox
Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson discusses James Comey and his behavior as Director of the FBI.
‘Free Speech’ Means Just That
A too-broad interpretation of the Constitution’s free-speech clause protects things that have nothing to do with speech and makes other clauses superfluous.
Eric A. Hanushek And Paul E. Peterson On Changes In The Achievement Gap
In 1964, as part of the Civil Rights Act, Congress authorized a national study of equality of educational opportunity. The study was conducted under the leadership of James Coleman.
Stanford to get $30 million for energy institute
Stanford University will get $30 million to establish a new institute on energy efficiency, the university announced today...
The Libertarian: “Race, Crime, And Policing”
Is the Ferguson effect impeding the work of law enforcement?
Discrimination and the Ivory Tower
The Supreme Court may finally get to clean up the mess that race-based admissions have created at our universities.

