Among Arab Reformers by Joshua Muravchik In Ramallah and Cairo there is talk of freedom and democracy, but the road ahead is obscure.
At the Quai d’Orsay by Our Readers An exchange between David Pryce-Jones and readers on his May 2005 piece, "Jews, Arabs, and French Diplomacy."
Classical Music by Our Readers An exchange between Terry Teachout and readers on his April 2005 piece, "Singing the Classical-Music Blues."
Getting Over Oil by Peter W. Huber Although the oil economy remains huge, the oil problem has become smaller, and can be made smaller still.
Homage to Bix by Terry Teachout Musicologists have yet to credit the influence and originality of an early jazz genius; his peers have always known better.
In Bellow’s Company by Herbert Gold Memories of a half-century of friendship (and non-friendship) with a literary genius and a genius for grief.
Myth, Fact, and the al-Dura Affair by Nidra Poller On the fifth anniversary of the al-Aqsa intifada, can the truth finally be told about the longest-lived emblem of Palestinian…
Rules of Law by Our Readers Readers react to Dan Seligman's June 2005 review of Mark R. Levin's "Men in Black: How the Supreme Court Is…
The Inequality Taboo by Charles Murray Even as the scientific evidence becomes increasingly inarguable, the subject of innate differences among groups remains as undiscussable as ever.…
The Vision Thing by Our Readers An exchange between Wilfred M. McClay and readers on his June 2005 piece, "Bush's Calling."
Who Needs Ayn Rand? by Algis Valiunas The work of the high priestess of reason continues to sell, but "with reason" her centenary has gone uncelebrated.