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What Were We Thinking? Selected Schar School Op-Eds (September 2021)

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From the Hill:

Now, the objection will be made that a wealth tax is somehow new and discriminates against those who have accumulated great wealth. That is not true.听

鈥擩ack A. Goldstone

From the Atlantic Council:

The signing of this Saudi-Russian agreement鈥攚hatever it contains鈥攊n the wake of the downfall of the US-backed Afghan government and the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan is a signal that Riyadh does not feel that it can fully rely on Washington and, so, is willing to hedge its bets by turning to Moscow.

鈥擬ark N. Katz

From Newsweek:

This is not to say that competitive markets ensure mistake-free power generation, distribution and a cleaner environment. They enable the application of data technology at scale to improve the efficiency of electricity production while facilitating consumer demand for more renewables.

鈥擱ichard Kauzlarich

From Frontiers in Public Health:

One way to fight Covid-19 vaccination hesitancy is to incorporate a nudge behavioral science approach in the government's strategy to increase the vaccination rate. Such an approach calls for 鈥渘udges,鈥 which simply are processes, adjustments, or structures meant to guide people toward a particular behavioral choice

鈥擯hD Candidate Muhammad Salar Khan

From Syndication Bureau:

Or at least not yet. For he has undoubtedly begun to follow the autocrats' playbook, accusing political parties and some businessmen of corruption and foreign ties, and intimidating media professionals. And he might find traction.

鈥擡llen Laipson

From the Sacramento Business Journals:

If adopted, California would establish the first legally binding biosecurity measure for the synthetic biology industry in the U.S.鈥攁nd in the world. Just as California has been at the forefront of establishing environmental protections that have become adopted nationwide, California has the potential to set a de facto national standard for biosecurity.

鈥擥regory Koblentz

From the Washington Post:

When the Supreme Court recently declined to block a novel Texas antiabortion law, it made huge waves in the Virginia gubernatorial race. And, if history holds, it could be bad news for the Republicans in Virginia this fall.

鈥擬ark J. Rozell

From the Hill:

To conservatives, health is a wholly individual responsibility. 鈥淧ublic health鈥 sounds too much like collectivism. And collectivism gives conservatives a nosebleed.

鈥擝ill Schneider

From Fee.org:

However, Biden鈥檚 actions will likely increase vaccine hesitancy, lead to further distrust of the government, and can expect multiple legal challenges 鈥 as well as civil disobedience.

鈥擬aster鈥檚 Student Mason Goad

From War on the Rocks:

The last time the U.S. government听published a national strategy听for countering weapons of mass destruction (WMD), Saddam Hussein was still ruling Iraq, North Korea鈥檚听Kim Jong-un听was a teenager, and听Xi Jinping听was governing a Chinese province.

鈥擹ak Kallenborn, Al Mauroni, Seth Carus, and Ron Fizer

From the National Interest:

This was only supposed to have occurred some months or even years after the withdrawal鈥攁ccording, at least, to what appeared to be the most relevant historical analogies: the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan.

鈥擬ark N. Katz

From LSE British Politics and Policy:

While local campaigning is certainly not the only factor influencing election outcomes, parties that ignore it will only do so at their own peril.

鈥擫ucas N煤帽ez

From Politics Today:

The Taliban are going through a transition from guerilla fighting to governance, bringing order to a multiethnic nation, and adjusting within the contemporary world. War and governance are two distinct issues. Now that the Taliban must govern, they face numerous challenges.

鈥擬aster鈥檚 in Political Science Student Hashim Wahdatyar

From the Washington Post:

A major reason for it: Who is and is not in the White House.

鈥擬ark J. Rozell

From the Hill:

America First policies horrify U.S. allies and the Washington foreign policy establishment. Nevertheless, they draw a lot of听popular support听because they capture a strong 鈥 and dangerous 鈥 public impulse, namely, complacency.

鈥擝ill Schneider

From World Politics Review:

It is unclear how effective these reassurances will be, but in any case, Beijing does not have considerable enough interests at stake in Afghanistan to warrant any substantial military or economic involvement there.听

鈥擯hD Candidate Jon Hoffman

From the Hill:

If the Democratic Party retains control of Congress in next year鈥檚 midterm elections, it will have the late Justice听Ruth Bader Ginsburgto thank.

鈥擡dward Rhodes

From the Washington Post:

No matter whether Virginia鈥檚 congressional and state legislative boundaries are drawn by Democrats, Republicans or a redistricting commission, the numbers make this clear: The suburbs will gain seats; the countryside will lose them.

鈥擬ark J. Rozell

From the Hill:

The odds are not good for Democrats next year. Republicans would need to gain five House seats and one Senate seat to take over Congress. In the听last ten midterm elections, the president鈥檚 party has lost an average of 23 House seats and three Senate seats.

鈥擝ill Schneider

From Foreign Policy:

Moscow and Beijing have not outright challenged the U.S.-led security order in the region, because they benefit from it: It has provided the security umbrella for them to become more involved in the region without having to assume the costs of physically protecting their interests.听

鈥擯hD Candidate Jon Hoffman