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All posts in: Senior Fellows

The April 2010 issue of Scientific American includes an article by Thomas Insel, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist who is the director of the National Institute of Mental Health. In “Faulty Circuits,” Insel describes new findings in the neurocircuitry of mood disorders. Many illnesses previously defined as “mental” (like autism and schizophrenia) are now recognized to

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A recent survey by the Pew Research Center is filled with bleak news for Democrats and the cause of liberalism. “By almost every conceivable measure Americans are less positive and more critical of government these days,” according to an overview of the Pew survey. It finds “a perfect storm of conditions associated with distrust of

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James Davison Hunter, author of a new book, To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy, and Possibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World, was recently the speaker at a conference on religion, politics, and public life, hosted by my Ethics and Public Policy Center colleague Michael Cromartie. Professor Hunter's motivation to write his book

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President Obama is in the early stages of setting a political trap for the GOP — one he hopes will take one of his greatest weaknesses and turn it into a strength. The weakness Obama has is that he is viewed as fiscally reckless by much of the electorate, having engineered an unprecedented spending binge

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Our major political parties have durable images, both positive and negative. Over the last several decades certain impressions — fairly or not — have taken hold, like barnacles on the hull of a ship. On the positive side for Republicans is that they have been widely seen as defenders of traditional values and institutions; strong

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One of the core claims made by Barack Obama during his presidential campaign — a commitment absolutely central to his run for the presidency — is that he would change the political culture of Washington. He would, by the force and power of his personality, uproot old habits. He would elevate the national debate, usher

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During this Holy Week, which encompasses the crucifixion of Jesus, I found myself thinking back to a remarkable 1980 “Firing Line” interview between journalist and author Malcolm Muggeridge and William F. Buckley Jr., on the topic of how does one find faith. Muggeridge — who himself became one of the the most eloquent defenders of

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We are now a week out from the passage of ObamaCare, so it's worth considering what approach the Republican party might take in the months ahead. The first thing is to understand that, politically speaking, the GOP is in extremely good shape. President Obama succeeded in passing health care legislation — but he has not

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As readers of Politics Daily are aware, David Corn and I have gone back and forth with one another on whether President Bush lied us into the Iraq war. The whole exchange was triggered by something I wrote here, which actually had nothing to do with the reasons we went to war. But my piece

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By now the efforts of the White House to isolate and humiliate Israel because of the latter's decision to approve 1,600 new Jewish homes in East Jerusalem (which is, after all, its capital) are well known: from the scolding language to the leaks about Secretary Clinton's phone call dressing down Prime Minister Netanyahu to the

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