US Pens Deal for New Military Base in Micronesia in Latest Move to Keep China Out of Pacific
Tag: American Enterprise Institute
When Clean Energy Is Powered by Dirty Labor
Goldman Sachs-Supported Solar Company Uses Prison Labor to Make Panels
But according the neoconservative think tank, American Enterprise Institute, it’s Xinjiang?!
Related:
Xinjiang solar firm debunks ‘forced labor’ lies by hosting Western media, analysts
Hawks seek revival with new group
Hawks seek revival with new group
As senior director for Near East and North African affairs from 2002 to 2009, Abrams played a key role in encouraging the U.S. invasion of Iraq and urging other interventions in the region and supported an armed coup attempt against the democratically elected Hamas government in Gaza, touching off a brief civil war that left the Islamist group stronger than ever. His advocacy as special envoy for Venezuela and Iran of ever-stronger sanctions against the governments in those two countries succeeded only in strengthening hard-line forces in both nations and pushing much of their middle classes into poverty. Given that record, why Vandenberg’s backers would choose him as the group’s chairman and public face, is intriguing, to say the least.
US to build anti-China missile network along first island chain
Tax break for corporate meal expenses inserted into coronavirus aid package
Tax break for corporate meal expenses inserted into coronavirus aid package
Since the 1980s, businesses have only been able to deduct 50 percent of their meal expenses off their federal taxes. A proposal championed by the White House and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) would increase that deduction to 100 percent allowing companies to deduct the full cost of a business meal off their federal taxes.
50 years of tax cuts for the rich failed to trickle down, economics study says
Neoconservativism In A Nutshell
Neoconservativism In A Nutshell
If I were asked to boil down neoconservatism to its essential elements—that is, those that have remained consistent over the past nearly 50 years—I would cite the following:
* a Manichean view of a world in which good and evil are constantly at war and the United States has an obligation to lead forces for good around the globe.
* a belief in the moral exceptionalism of both the United States and Israel and the absolute moral necessity for the U.S. to defend Israel’s security.
* a conviction that, in order to keep evil at bay, the United States must have—and be willing to exercise—the military power necessary to defeat any and all challengers. There’s a corollary: force is the only language that evil understands.
* the 1930s—with Munich, appeasement, Chamberlain, Churchill—taught us everything we need to know about evil and how to fight it.
* democracy is generally desirable, but it always depends on who wins.