Aug. 10, 2017
Good morning from Washington, where the plot of House Democrats' IT scandal thickens while lawmakers vacation. We've got the immigration angle from Mark Tapscott and related commentary from Michelle Malkin. President Trump favors a federal law allowing Americans to try experimental drugs that could save their lives. Fred Lucas reports. What's with Google's sacking of an open-minded employee? Jarrett Stepman explores. Plus: Jason Snead on the Gray Lady's offensive "voter suppression" game, Katrina Willis on a technology maven's LGBT agenda, and Walter Williams on how much college matters.
A federal law is needed, advocates say, so the Food and Drug Administration won't step in and prevent states from allowing sick patients to have access to new drugs.
The philosophy of "diversity and inclusion" in Silicon Valley has been warped into a tool used against all dissenters.
This shameless game portrays race and geography as the determining factors in one's ability to vote, while disregarding the alarmism and stereotypes it perpetuates.
The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee requests documents on the six Pakistani suspects accused of stealing equipment from Congress and accessing computers without permission.
Given that these foreign IT workers now under investigation were paid for with our tax dollars, Americans deserve to know their path to the public trough.
"It's the religious right that decided to make marriage an issue," the Colorado multimillionaire says.
Why should students be admitted to college when they are not capable of academic performance at the college level? That gets the nation's high schools off the hook.
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