Russia's War in Ukraine Threatens Starvation for the World's Poor
Global hunger declined for decades before pandemic policies and Russia’s invasion broke the world.
Global hunger declined for decades before pandemic policies and Russia’s invasion broke the world.
Imprisoned Russian opposition leader Ilya Yashin explains why the West should avoid ascribing collective guilt to Russians. He's right on both moral and pragmatic grounds.
His State of the Union address sketched a foreign policy that is reckless on some points, relatively restrained on others, and utterly uninterested in any real resolution to America’s lingering military entanglements.
Expect a lot of harsh positioning on immigration and China.
Hungary's inflation hits 24.5 percent—the highest in the European Union—and Orbán's price controls aren't helping.
Compared to Russia, war with China is a deeper nightmare.
Western nations should adopt a general policy of granting refuge to Russians seeking to avoid conscription, and otherwise fleeing Vladimir Putin's increasingly repressive regime.
A new State Department initiative will let American citizens sponsor refugees fleeing danger.
The interview covers the Uniting for Ukraine program, the expansion of private refugee sponsorship to cover migrants from elsewhere, and various potential objections to these policies.
Responses to some of the most common queries I have gotten.
Kevin McCarthy's pick to lead the House Foreign Affairs Committee evades any post-Trump humbleness in foreign policy.
The move is a step in the right direction. But it has limitations and is combined with harmful "border enforcement" measures.
For most aid critics, the urge to cut off Kyiv appears unconnected to any sort of principled realism, non-interventionism, or even isolationism.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion of America's continued funding of Ukraine's defense against Russia's invasion.
The article explains why the progam is a major improvement over previous policies, and how it can be further improved and made a model for refugee policy generally.
The tendency of those in power to topple or embarrass themselves by overreaching should provide a lesson to policy makers.
If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
Plus: The editors look back on what pieces of cultural media impacted them the most this year.
They say the U.S. is pivoting to other conflicts, but the Pentagon hasn't exactly left the Middle East and North Africa behind.
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It's especially outrageous when considering the billions of dollars in fraud that took place thanks to COVID-19 relief programs.
There is much to criticize in Biden's record on immigration issues. But the administration has also made some major improvements.
The Human Rights Foundation is mobilizing a global band of activists to fight authoritarianism in China, Iran, Russia, and beyond.
In sharp contrast to the sclerotic traditional refugee admissions program, the new private refugee sponsorship program enables Ukrainians fleeing war and repression to enter the US quickly and relatively easily. As a participating sponsor myself, I have firsthand knowledge of its effectiveness.
Until next year's, because capitalism is always making things better.
The Pentagon is seeking to corroborate those reports.
Privatization can free orbital innovation from ground-bound politics.
Accountability, diplomacy, and planning are essential for preventing a forever proxy war.
Antiwar.com's Scott Horton and former Army Lt. Col. Daniel Davis warn about the grave danger of escalating the war in Ukraine
Progressives shouldn't be ashamed of being anti-war.
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Politicians have turned the unthinkable into a real threat for which you should prepare.
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Vladimir Putin's annexation plan is indefensible on both legal and moral grounds. Some of the reasons why have broader implications for normative theories of secession and self-determination.
Uniting for Ukraine, a program providing private support to displaced Ukrainians, has proved more effective than the government's own resettlement efforts.
Plus: The editors unpack a philosophical question from a listener concerning foreign policy.
Plus: Gov. Ron DeSantis gets accused of fair-weather fiscal responsibility, warrantless drone searches might be illegal, and Lizzo's flute playing sparks a fake controversy.
Several countries are rejecting Russians fleeing forced military service. But offering them refuge would help protect dissidents and deprive Putin of critical manpower.
Plus: The editors engage in a full-throated denunciation of the CIA in response to a listener question.
A comment by Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas highlights a longstanding pernicious fallacy.
It should also lead Western nations to grant asylum to Russian soldiers who surrender or desert, and those who evade the military draft.
Unsurprisingly, numerous Russians don't want to be forced to fight in Vladimir Putin's pointless war.
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Their articles do not, in fact, get more accurate.
A easy-to-remedy snafu in the government's Uniting for Ukraine program is exposing some Ukrainian migrants to deportation and preventing others from working legally in the United States.
Government officials broke the world, and we’re all paying the price.