It doesn’t take artificial intelligence to deduce why so many power plants have shut down recently.
Opinion
A thoughtful email at a time of tragedy led to an exposé on a massive Las Vegas-based Ponzi scheme.
The most suspenseful days of a campaign are supposed to come before Election Day, not after it.
It’s not normal for the FBI to search the sitting president’s vacation house.
All plug-in by 2035? Good luck.
There are lies, liars and then there’s Rep. George Santos.
If they weren’t so costly, the government’s failures would be almost impressive.
The “Chicken Little” claims from teacher unions about school choice are about to get a lot less believable.
Journalism is a protected right, not a crime.
African-American voters overwhelmingly enjoyed the election system President Joe Biden once deemed “Jim Crow in the 21st Century.”
If President Joe Biden has a coherent strategy for ending the Ukraine war, now would be an opportune time to deploy it.
It was the best of speeches. It was the worst of speeches. That dichotomy defined Gov. Joe Lombardo’s first State of the State address.
It would be a tragedy upon a tragedy if the horrific murder of Review-Journal reporter Jeff German resulted in the gutting of Nevada’s shield law.
Last week, the General Accounting Office concluded that the Pentagon cannot account for at least $220 billion in military gear given out to defense contractors.
It’s not a great sign when the institutions teaching accounting classes do such a poor job accounting for their funding.
Completed, move-in-ready homes and models now welcoming tours Las Vegas’s most anticipated new homes have arrived within the private gates of Ascaya, the luxury mountainside community set high above the valley in Henderson. The Canyon Residences has completed its first terrace of homes and is now welcoming private tours of its four staged model homes, […]
Las Vegas is now part of an unfortunate club. It’s one of many cities where a viral video has been shot revealing the ruinous results of soft-on-crime policies embraced by Democrats.
CRT adherents don’t see two individuals, they see two representatives of their class. Deobra Redden is Black, so he’s oppressed. Judge Mary Kay Holthus, who’s white, is the oppressor.
As many as 26 percent of American adults — more than 1 in 4 — have some type of disability.
A new Review-Journal feature called “What Are They Hiding?” will spotlight all the bad-faith ways Nevada governments hide public records from taxpayers.
