United States can get what it needs without military force.
Editorials
Today we celebrate a great man.
Some of the country’s most pressing problems have a simple solution — build more.
Jealousy produces terrible public policy.
The recent whirlwind of international events — from Ukraine to Venezuela to Iran — has pushed the Gaza conflict off the front pages.
The Clark County Education Association recently testified in favor of paying more to teachers who work in hard-to-fill positions.
The Senate should now proceed with urgency to put the measure on the president’s desk.
Michele Fiore won’t be returning to the Nye County bench anytime soon — and that’s a boost to the integrity of the Nevada judiciary.
Too bad Clark County commissioners frittered away millions last year on a legal settlement necessitated by bureaucratic arrogance.
Israel has stepped up its ground campaign in Gaza in an effort to free remaining hostages and to pressure Hamas terrorists to end the futile war they started.
Nevada’s education problems won’t be fixed by teachers spending less time in the classroom. Yet that’s just what one bill could lead to.
Sometimes it’s easier to blame something you can’t control than confront a problem you can. That certainly applies to the Colorado River.
Politics isn’t for the faint-hearted, but the recent attacks on Sen. John Fetterman, the Pennsylvania Democrat, have been particularly ruthless.
Trump and the Republicans want to defund PBS and NPR.
Surprise: Expanding Medicaid to cover illegal immigrants breaks the bank.
