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We’re almost half way through the legislative session. The House passed 416 measures to the state Senate, and we received 456 bills from that chamber. Most of the Senate bills have been read for a second time and assigned to committees. This is a procedural process required by House rule.
Read moreElitist writers have recently published articles extolling the benefits of designating Mega-cities as the political powerhouses of the future.
Read more[Dennis Prager is a syndicated columnist, nationally-syndicated radio host, and creator of PragerU.]
Read more[Ditch is a research associate specializing in budget and transportation policy in the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at The Heritage Foundation.]
Read moreBecause I’m one of the great cow trappers in western folklore I am often asked to relate my harrowing experiences as a student of the art. Cow trapping, as you may know, is very much a lost art amongst today’s macho cowboys. That is because when a few wild strays are left behind on a modern day round-up a crew of cowboys usually goes out and either ropes them or shoots them. I, on the other hand, trap them. There are several reasons why I prefer this method. Number one, I can’t rope, number two, I can’t shoot, and number three my horse, Gentleman, is too slow.
Read more[Matthew Dickerson is the director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at The Heritage Foundation.]
Read moreThe Facebook page of 21-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, the suspect in the Boulder, Colo., supermarket massacre, included anti-Trump messaging, as well as pro-Islam messages. And he may have had sympathies to the Islamic State (ISIS), according to reports.
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