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http://online.wsj.com/page/2_0006.html
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10 hours 37 min ago
How long will the Danes even own it?
Biden blocks Nippon Steel’s investment bid in an act of American economic masochism.
Johnson wins, but the GOP malcontents send a warning message.
A federal appeals court smacks down Biden’s FCC regulators.
Its vessels are suspected of involvement in the sabotage of undersea cables.
Lend me your ears: An obsession with Rome isn’t a bad thing.
Periodic reauthorization by lawmakers is necessary to ensure the swamp doesn’t grow back.
What the outgoing administration might be thinking about a world it’s leaving in chaos.
Rohit Chopra’s assault on Zelle will create more openings for crooks.
The president wanted Jews out of the West Bank. The prime minister went only as far as the Sinai.
The comedian thinks the far left isn’t ‘nearly as crazy as the crazies on the right’—but these days he focuses as much fire on the former.
Season’s greetings from the New York Times.
Things I’ve learned from Lincoln, C.S. Lewis, David Foster Wallace, and my friend’s grandmother.
The Great Bend hydroelectric project would harm the environment in South Asia and hinder Chinese human development.
Their presidencies were both undone by inflation and U.S. weakness abroad.
Citigroup, BofA and Morgan Stanley join the coercive climate-policy exodus.
The Chief calls out the growing threats of violence against judges.
Starring Angel Blue and Piotr Beczała, Michael Mayer’s new staging of Verdi’s Egyptian classic favors monumentality at nearly every turn, but it struggles to come to fiery dramatic or musical life.
A rotating cast, currently featuring John Mulaney, Fred Armisen and Richard Kind, amusingly brings to the stage short stories by Simon Rich.
‘The donors, who are the financial backbone, may not feel the economic pressures that ordinary people do.’
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