When Facebook announced its intention to get into the moneybusiness, we wondered what would be next. Its own court system? An army?: Our view
Author: The Editorial Board, USA TODAY
Clear wireless Sprint merger with T-Mobile. Lawsuit is on the wrong side.
In 5G era, three strong wireless competitors are better than two leaders, Verizon and AT&T, and two also-rans: Our view
What’s clear about the Donald Trump-Mexico deal on migrants and tariffs? It’s unclear.
But Trump tweets, tariffs, tantrumsand theatrics won’t stop caravans of asylum-seekers from Central America: Our view
Joe Biden and other 2020 Democrats give climate change the attention it deserves
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton spent only minutes on global warming during televised debates. Now, climate is a hot ‘crisis’ for voters: Our view
Women’s World Cup runs a manipulative game of pay inequity
With the goal of gender equality, the National Women’s Soccer League has filed against the U.S. Soccer Federation. But the real culprit? FIFA: Our view
Donald Trump, $22 trillion debt is no Laffer-ing matter
With $1 trillion budget deficit after Trump tax cuts, giving the Presidential Medal of Freedom to voodoo ‘supply side’ economist is obscene: Our view
Virginia Beach hero yet another sacrificial American in yet another mass shooting
Facing gun violence, ordinary Americans stepped in where lawmakers fear to tread. Will Congress and the Virginia General Assembly step up?: Our view
I’ll take ‘The Importance of Education to Jeopardy!’ for $1,000, Alex
James Holzhauer, who made ‘Jeopardy!’ hot on sports talk radio, finally lost to librarian Emma Boettcher. Knowledge is, indeed, good: Our view
States erect un-American roadblocks to voter registration drives
Election laws telling citizens whether, and how, theycancommunicate with other citizens to facilitate voting are constitutionally suspect: Our view
Following Donald Trump’s political playbook, too many Democrats crowd presidential race
In the 2020 election, long-shot candidateshope Electoral College lightning could strike again. For others, campaigning is brand burnishing: Our view