U.S.- China trade war escalates.
mc-opinion
Your series “Deserted in the Desert” about Northwest Academy ignored some important facts. Any entity working with maladapted youth will have allegations.
Conservatives are now attacking the Green New Deal by pointing out (correctly) that government control of the economy will not work, will raise taxes, will cost too much, etc.
I don’t care about a billionaire president’s tax return. I want to see all the tax returns of Harry Reid and his entire family, from the year he was elected to Congress to the day he retired.
If left unchecked, politicians would allow America’s Nanny State to grow to immeasurable proportions.
It was interesting that your Saturday editorial mentioned nuclear power as a way to attain the carbon-free goals of the Green New Deal and the state of Nevada.
I’ve been married to a middle-school teacher for more than 30 years. I believe teacher-student relationships have gradually gotten worse over that time.
As an attendee at Al Gore’s excellent presentation at UNLV, I was very pleased to see Henry Brean’s comprehensive summary of the event.
Review-Journal editorial cartoonist Michael Ramirez is a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and a three-time winner of the Sigma Delta Chi Award. Contact him at mramirez@reviewjournal.com.
In response to Anthony L. Ashby’s Monday letter defending personal injury attorneys:
In a letter to the editor, Jerry Fink asks if anyone else suspects “a correlation between the sudden outbreak of communicable diseases … and thousands of migrants overwhelming our Southern border.”
Instead of us Nevadans paying for both sides of the battle over Yucca Mountain, let’s be smart about it.
Forget the record-high stock market. Politicians are the best investment money can buy. Consider what attorney general Aaron Ford has done for his former employer, law firm Eglet Prince.
The priority for some environmentalists isn’t saving species, but limiting human development. That’s the takeaway from the Center for Biological Diversity’s newest plan, which would put a damper on Las Vegas’ humming economy.