Washington Examiner / Magazine
December 22, 2020 Issue
December 22, 2020 Print Edition
Cover Story
Conservatives we lost in 2020
Conservatives got an inkling of how bad 2020 would be before the year even started. On Dec. 30, 2019, Gertrude Himmelfarb died. She was just the first of many conservative luminaries to die over the next 12 months — and it is worth remembering each one and what they contributed to conservatism and our country. As conservatism enters its next chapter, without a slew of great ideas or clarity regarding its future direction, learning lessons from these heroes of the past can potentially be a first step in discerning the way forward into the future. Let’s start with Himmelfarb, an eminent historian and also wife of the late Irving Kristol. She wrote scholarly and compelling works about anti-Semitism and the Victorian era that always had contemporary relevance. Even those who disliked her politics could not...

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Your Land

Medical school mania
Magazine - Your Land
Medical school mania
Just one pandemic and suddenly everyone wants to be a doctor. Medical schools across the country are reporting...
The remote learning failure continues
Magazine - Your Land
The remote learning failure continues
Remote education has been a failure. Children are failing, cutting class, and never getting to see their friends....
‘Build a snowman’
Magazine - Your Land
‘Build a snowman’
We disagreed about many things during the coronavirus pandemic, but we can all agree that the villain of...
Word of the Week: ‘Listen down’
Magazine - Your Land
Word of the Week: ‘Listen down’
Nothing I know about Tom Cruise makes me think that he is, overall, a good guy. That said,...
Magazine - Your Land
Put some pants on
Just as you wouldn’t want to sell raincoats in the desert, it’s pretty rough to sell pants during a lockdown. While retailers of all sorts have struggled since...

Business

Lockdowns are the great unequalizer
Business
Lockdowns are the great unequalizer
Democrats and their liberal economic advisers obsess about income inequality. Will someone please tell them that...
COVID-19 vaccine may not mean workers return to offices
Business
COVID-19 vaccine may not mean workers return to offices
The promise that the COVID-19 vaccine will eventually bring things back to normal might not be...

Washington Briefing

Business
Automakers embrace electric cars as they prepare for policy U-turn under Biden
President-elect Joe Biden has made big promises to boost electric cars, a sharp break from the Trump administration’s...
Economy
Despite lack of experience, Buttigieg gets nominated for secretary of transportation
On Dec. 16, President-Elect Joe Biden announced that he would nominate Pete Buttigieg to head the Department of...
Healthcare
Some people may have preexisting immunity to the coronavirus
In recent months, a number of scientific studies have found that some people have immune systems with cells...
Magazine
‘White supremacy’ was a leftist scam
When facts are stranger than fiction, pundits will say, “You can’t make this stuff up.” But actually, you can make...
Magazine
Should Alito stay or go?
Through the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, the 1857 Dred Scott case, and back to the beginning of the republic,...

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