Comment & Opinion - Columnists Archives
Whether I’m travelling in a developed or developing country, one of the common features of news reports is the presence of ratios, often termed the “something…
As a third-generation graduate of the University of Chicago, nuclear power has a special place in my thinking about policy. The University of Chicago Maroons (the university…
On the face of it, they are similar. New Orleans, USA had been under threat of serious hurricanes for over a century. The fault lines running along the Japanese coast were…
In January, I again watched the Paris-Dakar Rally (this being the 32nd running of the event, on a route that passed through neither Paris nor Dakar), one of the top events…
From 1981 to 1989, some of the cleverest diplomats and lawyers from around Europe met in Luxembourg to devise what we now know as the Schengen agreements. These agreements, a…
Many recent histories, including Samuel P. Huntington’s, allege that cultural divisions drive policies on Civilization A that are inherently in conflict with those of…
This post was co-authored with my friend and colleague Lt. Patrick Larsen. Pat is a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy and a graduate student at the University of…
It started the New Year at 53, hopelessly out of shape and in the midst of an existential crisis of such terrible complexity the Greek Gods would wonder whether they hadn’t missed…
The Egyptian dream of a peaceful revolution may have vanished under the cudgels of goon squads loyal to the Mubarak regime – the dream of freedom certainly hasn’t. That is what…
For tomorrow, 26 January, the European Commission had announced to present a revised EU raw materials strategy. Based on the 2008 raw materials initiative, the new document was…