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At last a levy the White House doesn’t like.
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Loose money in America, capital controls abroad.
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By Rob Green
The cause of higher grocery bills isn’t the drought. It’s the failed federal ethanol policy.
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By Ron Wyden and Andrew Rasiej
A volunteer technology corps would have been a godsend in Hurricane Sandy’s aftermath.
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By George LeMieux
Some government antifraud and antiabuse efforts are actually losing more money.
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Bruce Bawer on universities and why the American miracle is fading into the mists of history.
BOOKSHELF
By Robert K. Landers
Many American colonists joined the Sons of Liberty—lawyers and merchants as well as writers and tavern organizers.
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The famous investor has picked an odd time to take issue with the president's second-term agenda
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By Allysia Finley
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie had better enjoy his post-hurricane honeymoon because he may have a big budget mess on his hands next year.
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By Stephen Moore
Behind closed doors, the White House and congressional Democrats want only one thing: higher taxes.
By James Taranto
Labor unions face challenges from their own members.
Tuesday 3:29 p.m. ET
OUTSIDE THE BOX
By Pete du Pont
On its current trajectory, America will look like France or Greece before long.
"We have a real problem with this whole political campaign class. They just have to be purged."
Browse the back issues for WSJ contributors.
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BUSINESS ASIA
By Joseph Sternberg
The factory fire in Dhaka sprang from a particular political economy.
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The Walker Art Center presents some of the starkly divergent ways that artists have treated the moving image.
By Steven Malanga
From the City Journal
Two books shed light on the African National Congress's Communist-influenced past and turbulent present. Rian Malan reviews Douglas Foster's "After Mandela" and Stephen Ellis's "External Mission."
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The famous investor has picked an odd time to take issue with the president's second-term agenda
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Pepper...and Salt
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From the Media Research Center
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A transcript of the weekend's program:
Gov. Scott Walker explains why he's not setting up an ObamaCare exchange. Plus Obama's regulatory agenda, and sequestration and the fiscal cliff. 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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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.