On energy, China can sit this crisis out. Here’s why.

Source: Responsible Statecraft
by Wenjing Wang

“The Strait of Hormuz crisis has sparked a new round of debates on the implications for China of the U.S.-Israel war against Iran. Citing China’s reliance on imports of oil and liquified natural gas (LNG) that pass through the largely closed strait, some experts argue that China has limited capabilities to protect its own strategic and commercial interests in the region. But this analysis is based on a false assumption about Chinese energy policy. It is true that China is the world’s largest importer of oil and natural gas. But Beijing has long recognized the importance of energy security and the dangers of relying on a single source of energy imports.” (03/26/26)

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/china-energy-crisis/

Durham Police and Prosecutors Committed Numerous Crimes in the Duke Lacrosse Case – And Escaped Meaningful Punishment

Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
by William L Anderson

“Through a campaign of lying, aided by the Durham Police Department, the media, and Duke University’s administration and faculty leadership, Durham County District Attorney Michael Nifong was able to ram through false charges of rape, kidnapping, and sexual assault against three Duke University members of the lacrosse team. By June 2006, things looked bleak for the accused, as it became evident that Nifong might well succeed in getting the case to a jury, and then convincing those jurors to convict. Although a year later, the charges would be dismissed and Nifong would be disbarred, such outcomes seemed impossibly far off in the summer of 2006, as the prosecution racked up one victory over another.” (03/26/26)

https://mises.org/mises-wire/durham-police-and-prosecutors-committed-numerous-crimes-duke-lacrosse-case-and-escaped-meaningful-punishment

Hungary: Regime Files Charges Against Prominent Journalist for Alleged Espionage

Source: US News & World Report

“Hungary’s pro-Russian government has launched criminal charges against a prominent investigative journalist whom it accuses of conducting spying activities in coordination with a foreign country, a minister said on Thursday. The journalist, Szabolcs Panyi, focuses on national security and intelligence reporting and has published extensive reports detailing Russian influence operations in Hungary as well as the relationship between Moscow and Hungary’s foreign minister. Panyi denies the allegations, and an outlet Panyi writes for has accused Hungary’s government of ‘resorting to authoritarian tactics’ to discredit the journalist and his findings.” (03/26/26)

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2026-03-26/hungarys-government-files-charges-against-prominent-journalist-for-alleged-espionage

Next-generation geothermal power: A commercial readiness assessment

Source: Niskanen Center
by Kenneth Sercy & Jia-Shen Tsai

“Next-generation geothermal (NGG) technology has advanced significantly in recent years, resulting in cost reductions and a strong cohort of startup companies seeking to develop projects that produce electricity at grid scale. The potential amount of power that could be generated by a mature geothermal industry, and the geographic flexibility of the technology, could significantly alter the generation mix across the United States. As a carbon-free power option drawn from an inexhaustible energy source with a small land use footprint, commercialization and wide adoption would help meet many energy sector objectives, such as domestic supply diversity, emissions reductions, and round-the-clock power generation for reliability needs. These attributes have earned NGG bipartisan support. Nonetheless, continued advancement and scaling are far from inevitable.” (03/26/26)

https://www.niskanencenter.org/next-generation-geothermal-power/

We can’t “incarcerate our way out of crime.” But we can deter a lot more of it.

Source: Niskanen Center
by Geg Newburn

“The original X post argues that we can incarcerate our way out of crime because large majorities of those responsible for large fractions of serious crime have at least one prior arrest. The necessary implication is that the lever by which to achieve that goal is to incarcerate every arrestee for as long as it takes to reduce their threat level to zero. If the U.S. adopted this strategy tomorrow, we’d take the 5 million people who will be arrested over the next year and put them all in prison for, say, 15-20 years. In year two, arrest totals would drop …. But every year, new criminals begin their careers, some replacement occurs in drug markets, and a large number of low-rate offenders who escaped arrest in year one get caught in year two. The annual arrest numbers would never drop to zero, but the prison population would grow …” (03/26/26)

https://www.niskanencenter.org/we-cant-incarcerate-our-way-out-of-crime-but-we-can-deter-a-lot-more-of-it