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David Salazar David Salazar

CPRoundup: Failure to Launch

Last Thursday, in an act of defiance, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, despite international warnings not to do so, launched a rocket which they claimed to be a satellite, but which everyone else knew to be a long-range missile test.

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World Simon Gregory Jerome World Simon Gregory Jerome

Underground Economy And Wasted Potential

Imagine a world in which up to one half of a country’s gross domestic product (GDP) was not taxed. Imagine capitalist investors and heads of companies escaping the long-handed reach of state coffers, thereby avoiding their due contribution of hundreds of millions of dollars to the very citizenry that helped create their wealth to begin with.

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Jamie Boothe Jamie Boothe

Election 2012: Third Wheel

Traditionally, third-party candidates receive next to no attention in presidential races, mostly because it is an accepted truth that one could never win an election.

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Simon Rimmele Simon Rimmele

Political Minutes: Moral Hazard in Healthcare

Providing political coverage for this year’s Kenneth Arrow Lecture on moral hazard in the health insurance industry is a difficult task because everyone in the room seemed to be convinced that healthcare is not a political issue.

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Shervin Afshari-Tork Shervin Afshari-Tork

Election 2012: The Other Half

Now that the Republican nomination process is coming to a close, Democrats are beginning to define their campaign by focusing on critical issues that are sensitive to most voters in order to draw a clear contrast between itself and the GOP on both the budget and women’s reproductive rights.

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World Taylor Thompson World Taylor Thompson

Living On a Thin Line

The United States and the other members of the P5+1 group (the permanent five members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany) are entering “last chance” negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program in Istanbul this week.

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Jamie Boothe Jamie Boothe

Election 2012: Super PAC-Men

It is said that money talks, and indeed, individuals with great wealth want to influence this year’s election to serve their own purposes: Enter the Super PAC.

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World Michael Ard World Michael Ard

Taking the World By Storm

In a report from The Economist on Saturday discussing the massive buildup and modernization of China’s army, known as the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), one particular passage caught my eye.

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World Chris Brennan World Chris Brennan

Revisiting Bosnia

This April marks the 20th anniversary of the beginning of the conflict in Bosnia, which carried on for three and a half years from 1992 until the Dayton Peace Agreement in late 1995.

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World Simon Gregory Jerome World Simon Gregory Jerome

Utilizing the Citizens’ Initiative

Earlier this year at the summit of the African Union in Ethiopia, United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-Moon made a practically unprecedented speech in favor of LGBT rights, a speech that fomented much unrest among delegates in the room.

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Shervin Afshari-Tork Shervin Afshari-Tork

Election 2012: Addressing Agendas

While Republicans will be grappling with how to make Willard Mitt Romney come off as human, Democrats might have to battle criticism of their healthcare efforts should the Affordable Care Act be deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.

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