How about our foreign policy?
Not exact matches
Instead, our misgivings
about Bernie have more to do with
how competent he is when it comes to
foreign policy, an area where Hillary, a former Secretary of State, clearly has much more experience.
More broadly, the Cuba problem has raised questions within the national security community
about how the Trump administration is using intelligence information to guide its
foreign policy.
Juwai.com Co-CEO, Simon Henry recently spoke to Afternoon Show host, Tony Eastley on ABC News 24
about Chinese property investors in Australia, and
how foreign investment
policies will impact investment... Leer más >
Ridiculing Obama's efforts to engage the international community, Huckabee said, «There was once a time when our
foreign policy was, «Walk softly and carry a big stick»... Our new
policy is, walk softly and carry a great big olive branch, or maybe even a bag of Stay Puft marshmallows so that when we build around the campfire we can sing «Kumbaya» and have a lovely time holding arms and talking
about how well we're getting on.»
This is not to say that we can not come to impassioned, principled positions
about how to vote, particularly when dealing with issues as important as sexual assault, bigotry, racism, responsible
foreign policy, religious liberty, and the dignity of human life at every stage in its development.
For us the truth is not advice on
foreign policy, not strategy for
how to prevail in Nicaragua, not arguments
about taxes, all of which are important issues.
Over at Cato, Julian Sanchez has written a post
about how the aftermath of healthcare reform could reveal faultlines in existing political coalitions and trigger realignment: There's no intrinsic commonality between, say, «left» positions on taxation,
foreign policy, and reproductive....
I am sure that when these leaders wake up each morning, they are not thinking
about foreign policy, but
about domestic social unrest, the lack of provision of a proper welfare system,
about how to deal with the issue of internal migrants (some 200 million people on the move from villages to urban areas demanding the same rights as urban locals), and so on.
To Dare More Boldly, written by American
foreign policy analyst John Hulsman, and launched last night at Daunt's Books, explains
how the study and execution of political risk strategies have evolved down the centuries and provides a guide for those thinking
about how better to analyse such risk.
Academics: Suddenly, Everybody Loves Israel The most surprising thing
about the Arab world, observe Shai Feldman and Tamara Coffman at
Foreign Policy, «is
how relatively uncontroversial Israel has become.»
Her special areas of focus include U.N.
policy, U.S.
foreign policy and stories
about how other nations are grappling with climate change.
Something like a whirlwind in person, Radford cuts through the pre-lunch crowd at a swank Denver bar, where he spots me at a table chatting with his ingénue from The Merchant of Venice, Lynn Collins, and makes a beeline, hand extended in a gesture unaffected enough to shed a little light on
how unspoken he's been
about his film, United States
foreign policy, and actors.
Interview (begins at 17:28)-- Susan Glasser, editor in chief of
Foreign Policy Magazine, tells
how FP managed to create an impressive e-book in
about a week, starting on the very day Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigned.
Michael Levi's new book, The Power Surge, is very likely to be one of the best things you'll read
about the ongoing oil and gas boom in the United States... [T] he book is filled with detailed on - the - ground reporting and carefully reasoned observations
about how the oil and gas uptick could have all sorts of unexpected impacts on everything from U.S.
foreign policy to climate change to transportation.