I write to congratulate Gov. Brian Sandoval on his decisive action to prevent Syrian refugees from settling in Nevada. However, I call on him to extend this ban to all white people as well.
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Ben Carson met with the Review-Journal’s editorial board last week to discuss his vision for the country. We’ve chosen to highlight four of Carson’s positions we support and two positions that leave us skeptical.
Starting today, Nevadans may want to keep a watchful eye on what world leaders say and do in Paris. The heads of 190 countries, including U.S. President Barack Obama, are meeting for the United Nations Conference on Climate Change.
Letters from Murray M. MacDonald, Wanda Durick, David Wilhite and Jerry Patchman.
With February’s Nevada caucuses fast approaching, the Review-Journal is publishing a 10-editorial series on policies and government reforms all candidates should be able to get behind. The fifth policy goal we’d like all presidential candidates to champion: removing marijuana from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act.
Is political correctness on campus a real problem? Tellingly, it is less often defended than it is minimized.
The Syrian refugee debate has become a national embarrassment. It begins with a president, desperate to deflect attention from the collapse of his foreign policy, retreating to his one safe zone — ad hominem attacks on critics, this time for lack of compassion toward Syrian widows and orphans.
Our world of work — in Nevada, throughout the United States and across the globe — is changing. And it’s changing and being reshaped at a rate faster than at any time in human history. The pace of global urbanization, coupled with the lightning speed at which technological breakthroughs are occurring, is forcing us to re-evaluate virtually every facet of modern life. The scope of change, unimaginable a few years ago, is happening much faster than we ever thought possible.
Las Vegas Review-Journal staffers spend much of their time during any week reporting on the little things that sometimes produce big results — the extraordinary efforts of ordinary people.
The editorial on rooftop solar (and many before it) mistakenly claims NV Energy gives me 11.6 cents per kilowatt hour for the excess electricity I produce (“Solar must pay its way,” Nov. 22 Review-Journal). I am a new solar user, but based on my first nine months, I anticipate that over a year I will produce more electricity than I use. I make more than I use some months and use more in other months.