OREN CASS
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Oren (Hebrew: אורן) is a masculine given name, meaning 'pine' or 'ash' in Hebrew. In the Book of Chronicles, Oren is one of the sons of Jerahmeel, the first-born of Hezron, along with Ram, Bunah, Ozem and Ahijah. Oren, as a given name or surname, may also refer to:
In connection with: Oren
Description combos: or Jerahmeel with born to of is In Hebrew
Cass is the surname of: Amelia Cass (born 1999), British para-cyclist Annie Cass, later Annie Pearson, Viscountess Cowdray (1860–1932), British philanthropist and suffragist Barbara Cass-Beggs (1904–1990), Canadian folk song collector, singer and teacher Bettina Cass (born 1940), Australian sociologist and social policy adviser Brian Cass (born 1947), British business executive David Cass (1937–2008), American economist Dick Cass (born 1946), President of the National Football League's Baltimore Ravens Eleanor Baldwin Cass (1874–1966), American fencer Frank Cass (1930–2007), British publisher of books and academic journals Frederick Cass (1913–2000), Canadian politician George Washington Cass (1810–1888), American industrialist and president of the Northern Pacific Railway Godfrey Cass (1867–1951), Australian actor Harriet Cass (born 1952), British radio broadcaster Henry Cass (1902–1989), English film director Hilary Cass, British physician John Cass (1661–1718), English politician and philanthropist Lewis Cass (1782–1866), American Democratic presidential nominee in 1848, Secretary of State, Secretary of War, Michigan Governor Lewis Cass Jr. (1814–1878), American diplomat Maurice Cass (1884–1954), character actor Melnea Cass (1896–1978), American community and civil rights activist Moss Cass (1927–2022), Australian former politician Oren Cass (born 1983), American public policy commentator and political advisor Peggy Cass (1924–1999), American actress, comedian and game show panelist Robin Cass Canadian film and television producer Rodney Cass (1940–2018), English cricketer Ronald Cass (1923–2004), screenwriter and composer Thomas Cass (colonel) (1821–1862), Union colonel in the American Civil War Thomas Cass (surveyor) (1817–1895), pioneer surveyor in New Zealand
In connection with: Cass (surname)
Title combos: surname Cass
Description combos: born Cass 1661 Baldwin of British American English 1946
Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
The Manhattan Institute for Policy Research (renamed in 1981 from the International Center for Economic Policy Studies) is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit conservative think tank focused on domestic policy and urban affairs. The institute's focus covers a wide variety of issues including healthcare, higher education, public housing, prisoner reentry, and policing. It was established in Manhattan in 1978 by Antony Fisher and William J. Casey. The institute produces materials including books, articles, interviews, speeches, op-eds, policy research, and the quarterly publication City Journal. It is a key think tank and ranked in the Global Go To Think Tank Index (GGTTI) published by the University of Pennsylvania. Its current president is Reihan Salam, who has led the organization since being appointed in 2019.
In connection with: Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
Title combos: Policy for for Institute Manhattan Manhattan Research Policy Institute
Description combos: for City led being and Manhattan publication is Antony

Oren M. Cass (born 1983) is an American public policy commentator and political advisor. Since 2024, he has been chief economist at American Compass, a conservative think tank which he founded in 2020. He previously worked on the presidential campaigns of Mitt Romney in 2008 and 2012. According to a 2015 article in Politico, he is a "general policy impresario of the emerging conservative consensus on fighting poverty." From 2015 to 2019, he was a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research. He authored a book, The Once and Future Worker: A Vision for the Renewal of Work in America. In February 2020, Cass established American Compass, an organization aimed at the question of "what the post-Trump right-of-center is going to be."
In connection with: Oren Cass
Title combos: Cass Oren
Description combos: Politico 2008 right In Trump founded Since 2020 of
A wage subsidy is a payment to workers by the state, made either directly or through their employers. Its purposes are to redistribute income and to obviate the welfare trap attributed to other forms of relief, thereby reducing unemployment. It is most naturally implemented as a modification to the income tax system. The wage subsidy was proposed by A. C. Pigou in his book The Theory of Unemployment. It was subsequently advocated by American economists Edmund Phelps and Scott Sumner, American policy advisor Oren Cass, and British economist Tony Atkinson under the name of participation income. The wage subsidy differs from universal basic income (UBI) in being limited in its scope to workers in paid employment, and does not generally seek to take the place of other benefits.
In connection with: Wage subsidy
Title combos: subsidy Wage
Description combos: payment Atkinson The state unemployment Unemployment Pigou to the
Project 2025 (also known as the 2025 Presidential Transition Project) is a political initiative to reshape the federal government of the United States and consolidate executive power in favor of right-wing policies. The plan was published in April 2023 by The Heritage Foundation, an American conservative think tank, in anticipation of Donald Trump winning the 2024 presidential election. The ninth iteration of the Heritage Foundation's Mandate for Leadership series, Project 2025 is based on a controversial interpretation of the unitary executive theory that states that the entire executive branch is under the complete control of the president. The project's proponents say it would dismantle a government bureaucracy that is unaccountable and mostly liberal. Critics have called it an authoritarian, Christian nationalist plan that would steer the U.S. toward autocracy. Some legal experts say it would undermine the rule of law, separation of powers, separation of church and state, and civil liberties. The project calls for the replacement of merit-based federal civil service workers by people loyal to Trump and to take partisan control of key government agencies, including the Department of Justice (DOJ), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Department of Commerce (DOC), and Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Other agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Department of Education (ED), would be dismantled. It calls for reducing environmental regulations to favor fossil fuels and proposes making the National Institutes of Health (NIH) less independent while defunding its stem cell research. The blueprint seeks to reduce taxes on corporations, institute a flat income tax on individuals, cut Medicare and Medicaid, and reverse as many of President Joe Biden's policies as possible. It proposes criminalizing pornography, removing legal protections against anti-LGBT discrimination, and ending diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs while having the DOJ prosecute anti-white racism instead. The project recommends the arrest, detention, and mass deportation of illegal immigrants, and deploying the U.S. Armed Forces for domestic law enforcement. The plan also proposes enacting laws supported by the Christian right, such as criminalizing those who send and receive abortion and birth control medications and eliminating coverage of emergency contraception. Most of Project 2025's writers and contributors worked in either Trump's first administration (2017−2021) or his 2024 election campaign. Several Trump campaign officials maintained contact with Project 2025, seeing its goals as aligned with their Agenda 47 program. Trump later attempted to distance himself from the plan. After he won the 2024 election, he nominated several of the plan's architects and supporters to positions in his second administration. Four days into his second term, analysis by Time found that nearly two-thirds of Trump's executive actions "mirror or partially mirror" proposals from Project 2025.
In connection with: Project 2025
Title combos: Project 2025
Description combos: election President it inclusion emergency positions calls plan separation
List of The Daily Show episodes (2025)
This is a list of episodes for The Daily Show, a late-night talk and satirical news television program airing on Comedy Central, during 2025 (the series' 30th season). Jon Stewart serves as host once each week (primarily on Mondays), while other members of the show's correspondence roster ("The Best F#@king News Team") rotate sitting in the anchor chair the rest of the week.
In connection with: List of The Daily Show episodes (2025)
Title combos: Show Daily The Show 2025 Daily The of episodes
Description combos: other episodes news Central host Best This other is
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