Nevada’s education establishment wants to raise your property taxes — by a lot. Then, it wants you to pay more in sales tax.
Victor Joecks
Victor Joecks is a Review-Journal columnist who explores and explains policy issues three days a week in the Opinion section. Previously he served as the executive vice president of the Nevada Policy Research Institute. Victor is also a staff sergeant in Nevada National Guard. Originally from Washington state, Victor received his bachelor’s degree from Hillsdale College.
If you plan to rely on Social Security, President Joe Biden’s spending proposals should terrify you.
The federal government shouldn’t fund colleges that discriminate against Asian Americans. Senate Democrats voted against that, however.
Gov. Steve Sisolak did the right thing in putting an end date on Nevada’s coronavirus capacity restrictions. Now, he needs to do the same thing with the mask mandate.
If only the Secretary of State’s Office was as eager to investigate voter fraud as it is to engage in political spin.
Opposing riots shouldn’t be a partisan issue. Unfortunately, depending on who the rioters are, it’s largely turned into one.
It’s a lot easier to support the death penalty when you find out what people on death row have been convicted of.
Republican voters should give North Las Vegas Mayor John Lee careful consideration if — or more likely when — he runs for higher office.
If the coronavirus “experts” had been honest, government wouldn’t be able to exert so much control.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s national profile is rising, thanks to his ability to respond to the national mainstream media’s brazen attempts to destroy him.
If you want to help low-income workers, don’t raise the minimum wage. Reduce illegal immigration.
Either President Joe Biden knows nothing about voting restrictions during Jim Crow or he’s being deliberately dishonest about Georgia’s new voting law.
The coronavirus crisis is over, and yet government keeps looking for ways to expand its power. Its next tactic is vaccine passports.
The debate over elected versus appointed school board members misses the point. School board dysfunction isn’t the primary cause of the Clark County School District’s problems.
Limiting law enforcement to protect illegal immigrants isn’t a good idea. Some Democrats think otherwise.