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" ... Let me focus here on oil, given the worsening misconceptions out there on what is still our most vital source of energy, entrenched as the sine qua non of globalization without any material substitute whatsoever. ... "
" ... Such offsets are the sine qua non of legislators and staff on a tax-writing committee, and in my time on the Senate Finance Committee such pay-fors were all we staffers thought about. ... "
" ... Tablet vs. laptop: Needless to say, I tried typing with the Surface Book in my lap and indeed it behaved like a laptop. That's no small design feat with a 13.5-inch display that itself weighs 1.6 pounds (replete with electronics behind the screen). The whole package weighs over 3.3 pounds. Microsoft's "dynamic fulcrum hinge" does a good job of keeping things steady: poke or press on the screen and it won't lose its balance and tip over backward (that's why a kickstand is sine qua non for the other Surface products). But, overall, it still feels like a tablet with a keyboard accessory. That said, the tablet itself (sans keyboard) is the best Microsoft has made yet. Detached from the keyboard base, it's remarkably light for its size and the 6-million-pixel display is stunning. ... "
" ... Ukraine’s independence is a sine qua non for not just American, but global security and stability. Supporting it is the safest, most effective and cheapest strategy (past Presidents of both Parties notwithstanding) to counterbalance accelerating Russian aggression. Ukrainians have traditionally harbored a sense of democracy, individualism and a drive toward civic society that any American would recognize. Ukraine is the largest country in Europe, the size of England, Germany, Hungary and Israel, combined. With a democratic and civic tradition that Russia never had, Ukraine produced Europe’s first constitution for a representative democracy, outlining the separation of powers, and the concept of checks and balances. It preceded Philadelphia by 77 years, and was years ahead of Montesquieu’s The Spirit of the Laws. A coincidental intersection of today’s news with history and geography recalls a time even earlier, and the historian Paul of Aleppo (Syria) said: “Although a stranger I felt myself at home in Ukraine. But in Muscovy my heart felt heavy, for wherever I went no one was even a little free . . . . Those who want to shorten their life by fifteen years must go to the land of Muscovy. In Ukraine I found joy in life, freedom and civilization." ... "
" ... What Tokyo fears is that China’s vision (and longer term sine qua non) for shared power presupposes a bilateral relationship by and between equals, and not one in which the U.S. side is (as now) a constellation of U.S. “alliances” with states, like Japan and South Korea, that act as clients of the U.S. in foreign relations, as well as platforms for forward strategic military forces potentially (or actually) targeted at China. ... "