Who can mourn 2025?
Editorials
Don’t blame data centers for rising electricity costs.
The need for private charity is a year-round concern. Heading into 2026, it’s important that Nevadans not allow the less fortunate to fade into the background.
Politicians of both parties have promised to fix the nation’s broken permitting system. But those promises have not been kept, and the status quo prevails.
The Ivanpah solar plant in California, just across the Nevada line near Primm, came online with much fanfare in 2014, heralded as the future for American energy production.
While attention has focused on the Supreme Court’s ObamaCare and immigration rulings, it’s worth noting that the justices this week also reaffirmed their 2010 decision regarding the First Amendment and political speech.
In 2009, President Obama insisted his proposal to financially penalize individuals who didn’t purchase health insurance was not a tax. Congressional Democrats echoed that sentiment in 2010 when they narrowly passed ObamaCare and the “individual mandate.”
In the term’s most highly anticipated decision outside the ObamaCare case, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rendered its verdict on Arizona’s strict immigration law. Those on both sides of the debate claimed victory, but the decision was a mixed bag for everyone involved.
House Republicans last week backed off a threat to block enforcement of new Federal Communications Commission rules involving TV broadcasters and political ads.
