number_of_abortions_in_u.s._hit_historic_low_in_2015_the_most_recent_year_for_which_data_is_available_-_the_washington_post.pdf |
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Saudi Arabia's Crisis Is Economic And Demographic
mentioning Samuel Tadros, Hoover Institution via AEI There is an assumption in Washington that Saudi Arabia is in a state of crisis. The US-Saudi bilateral relationship is shaken, but the outrage over the murder of Jamal Khashoggi has also seeped into Saudi domestic politics, not in an upheaval in the leadership or direct threat to the crown prince, but in an increasing awareness on the part of the king that citizens need reassurance. THE SEXUAL STATE: A LOOK AT COERCION AND IDENTITY POLITICS & HOW UNIVERSITIES CORRUPT THE YOUNG11/3/2018 “With the Help of the State
”Rev. James V. Schall, S.J. “It’s time to face up to the harms the Sexual Revolution has caused. Whether you’re male or female, straight or gay, young or old, religious or irreligious: what kind of a world do you want to help create? A world in which every child has a legally recognized right to a relationship with both parents? […]
Homeschooling, Into the Breach
The number of American parents choosing to opt out of traditional education continues to grow. JOEL KOTKIN, ALI MODARRES
Middle East Cities Should Look Forward—and Back To compete in the global economy, the region’s urban centers need to return to their commercial roots and reclaim a bygone culture of tolerance. THE CHAMPIONS OF ROE KNOW A BRITTLE VICTORY & MASS MIGRATION OUT OF CITIES TO SUBURBAN LIFE10/7/2018 Hoover Series Examines International Effects Of Demographic Shifts
featuring Hoover Institution, George P. Shultz, Michael McFaul, Stephen Kotkin, David Holloway via The Stanford Daily “Governance in an Emerging New World,” an initiative by the Hoover Institution, launched on Wednesday with the aim of promoting discussion and thinking on the governance challenges posed by rapid demographic, technological and societal change around the globe. The first panel in the series, moderated by Deputy Director-General of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) Kori Schake, considered these issues with regard to Russia. WHERE THERE ARE NO CHILDREN; THEIR ARE NO GROWN UPS & HABITS AND SOCIAL MOBILITY OF THE MIDDLE CLASS9/27/2018 Where There Are No Children, There Are No Grown-Ups By Joseph Pearce on Sep 26, 2018 10:00 pm Well-intended neglect Naomi Schaefer Riley | City Journal Even if babies born exposed to drugs in utero do not have physical birth defects, they are still being sent home with parents who may not be capable of caring for them. These children are not getting the kind of nurturing essential to proper social and intellectual development. Even worse, their parents may not be paying attention to their safety and well-being. In our quest to make up for past mistakes, we can’t ignore these facts. Do Middle-Class Cultural Practices Facilitate Downward Mobility? Kay Hymowitz, Institute for Family Studies What Classical Education Tells Us About Sex Education
Our morally bankrupt culture sees sex as no more important, complex, or harmless than the ABCs. But it is unwise to teach
Population race: India to overtake China ‘in 3 to 5 years’ BY ASIA TIMES STAFF China's population growth rate of 0.59% meant it recently ranked 159th worldwide Mark Wang and Cecilia Joy-Perez write: After decades of blind faith in its draconian one child policy, the CCP is waking up to the problems of low fertility. China’s population is greying rapidly, reducing the size of the PRC labor force. But whether the CCP will be successful in raising fertility rates is another question all together. Because, needless to say, Beijing is going about its newfound reproductive zeal with its signature Orwellian style. - American Enterprise Institute
Review: The Rise Of The Asian Superpowers Isn't Inevitable
featuring Michael R. Auslin via The Federalist In his new book, 'The End of the Asian Century,' the Hoover Institution's Michael Auslin argues that the West isn't paying enough attention to the political, demographic, and economic risks that threaten Asia's growing influence in world affairs.
Frank Dikotter On Mao's Great Famine by Russell Roberts featuring Frank Dikötter via EconTalk Historian Frank Dikötter of the University of Hong Kong and author of Mao's Great Famine talks about the book with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Dikötter chronicles the strategies Mao and the Chinese leadership implemented to increase grain and steel production in the late 1950s leading to a collapse in agricultural output and the deaths of millions by starvation. Child Brides in Turkey
by Burak Bekdil • July 30, 2018 at 5:00 am
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