What's hot in Texas and Dallas-Fort Worth
Rodger Jones: Is Dallas' new cab rule fair to the little guys?
Letting compressed natural gas taxis jump the line takes food out of the mouths of cabbies who can't afford to convert
Wayne Slater: Rove's Texas tales likely to raise eyebrows
The way former George W. Bush adviser Karl Rove remembers his time in Texas isn't exactly the way others do
Jacquielynn Floyd: There are times that words just fail us
Angela wants to do something, anything, that will protect children from violence in their own homes.
I wish I knew what to say
Colleen McCain Nelson: How one drop fell off our list
Please help us, Pastor Howard Falls implored about "a burnt house next door" to his church. "People on drugs are currently using the property as a smokehouse." And now it's gone
DMN: 10 drops in the bucket, our monthly update
FW Star-Telegram: Our frustrating State Board of Education
The way the board has turned setting education standards for Texas schools into a battleground for social issues and ideological agendas isn't just distressing. It's a disservice
And the best of the rest of the world
Adam B. Schaeffer: They spend what? Real cost of public schools
Spending figures provided by public school officials often leave out major costs and thus understate actual spending
Veronique de Rugy: Who is the stimulus stimulating? Teachers
Anne Foster: It's easy to fire teachers, but where's the community?
Mark Schneider: What Diane Ravitch gets wrong
Ronald Brownstein: The risk of inaction on health care
If Barack Obama's plan fails, as President Bill Clinton's did, it's likely that no president will attempt to seriously expand health care coverage for many years
Caddell and Schoen: Ignoring polls would cost Dems
Paul Krugman: The 3 big myths of health care reform
Mona Charen: One provision the Dems won't discuss
William McGurn: 5 words Obama won't say
Marilyn M. Barnewall: The great weakness in reconciliation
Timothy Noah: What happens if you refuse to buy insurance?
Reuel Marc Gerecht: The next wave of jihadists
The arrest of Colleen Renee LaRose, a blond-haired, blue-eyed, 46-year-old American, ought to make us reflect on a major ingredient in contemporary jihadism: Westernization
Eugene Robinson: 'Jihad Jane' and broad security checks
Carla Power: Can a single fatwa stop terrorism?
Bruce Riedel: Finally, a Taliban crackdown in Pakistan