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Politics, accountability and Dodd-Frank's Wall Street bureau.
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Treasury tries to gut penalties on Tehran's central bank.
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By Floyd Abrams
Julian Assange put many people at risk, which may have already cost lives.
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By Therese Raphael
Russians have tended to shake their heads, not their fists, at injustices. Putin's brazenness is changing that.
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By James Q. Wilson
Washington has learned to be frightened by gotcha news—even stories as false as the $16 muffin—and it responded by adopting gotcha idiocy.
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George Mason University economist Alex Tabarrok on the folly of universal college education.
BOOKSHELF
By Rufus Phillips
The eventful life and mysterious death of a Bangkok-based U.S. intelligence officer turned international textile trader.
By Joseph Rago
So the White House has decided that President Obama's re-election model is Teddy Roosevelt, Bull Moose version, circa 1910.
WONDER LAND
By Daniel Henninger
The president sounds more like a Corleone than a Roosevelt.
By James Taranto
The fine line between cynicism and naiveté.
Wednesday 3:41 p.m. ET
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By Therese Raphael
Regime change in countries where democracy is largely tokenism doesn't necessarily respect the electoral calendar.
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Two works of art, now on view in New York, linked by a stealthy repatriation deal.
By William P. Mumma
From the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
Three new books explore the history of Rome—its imperial and fascist past, its palaces, churches, memorials and piazzas. Dan Hofstadter reviews.
By Joseph Rago
So the White House has decided that President Obama's re-election model is Teddy Roosevelt, Bull Moose version, circa 1910.
Steve Moore on whether a write-in Republican candidate could win the primary. Plus, Bill McGurn and Allysia Finley on leftist academics who are teaching that economic growth is bad.
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Pepper...and Salt
By Kyle Drennen
From the Media Research Center
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A transcript of the weekend's program:
Can Romney beat Gingrich? Plus Barney Frank bids farewell and "insider trading" allegations roil Congress. Tune in this weekend for more: FOX News Channel, Saturday 2 p.m. and 11 p.m. ET.
The Journal Editorial Report Podcast.
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A transcript of the weekend's program on FOX News Channel.
We speak for free markets and free people, the principles, if you will, marked in the watershed year of 1776 by Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence and Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations." So over the past century and into the next, the Journal stands for free trade and sound money; against confiscatory taxation and the ukases of kings and other collectivists; and for individual autonomy against dictators, bullies and even the tempers of momentary majorities.