Voluntarily doing the right thing. Suppose the Franklin Roosevelt administration had enacted a law in the 1930s that required every restaurant customer in America to pay a 15 percent tip to waiters. The argument in favor of such a law would have been twofold: to help the poor and to stimulate the economy by getting more money ... MOREJacob Hornberger: Should There Be A Federal Tipping Law?
Voluntarily doing the right thing. Suppose the Franklin Roosevelt administration had enacted a law in the 1930s that required every restaurant customer in America to pay a 15 percent tip to waiters. The argument in favor of such a law would have been twofold: to help the poor and to stimulate the economy by getting more money ... MORETom Price: Regulations Are Choking Small Business Growth
Strangled by red tape. The cost is $1.75 trillion. That’s the price of complying with Washington red tape — and that’s not a misprint. While the federal government has the responsibility to establish reasonable regulations to help protect the American people, federal rule-making is so costly and cumbersome that it actually impedes job creation ... MORESheldon Richman: Gun Control Is Not The Answer
Aurora shooting should not overshadow self-defense facts. The shooting in the Aurora, Colorado, movie theater has incited the usual debate over guns. One side says tighter gun restrictions could have prevented the horrible incident that night. The other responds that more guns in the hands of law-abiding people might have prevented it. While the theater ... MORE
Labels:
concealed carry,
crime,
gun control,
law,
police,
protection,
restrictions,
self-defense,
violence
DOJ: Family Can't Run Their Business As Catholics
Feds Want To Help You -- Whether You Want Help Or Not
Giving aid to people who don't want or need it. There are two powerful reasons for giving government aid to the poor, one good and one bad. It alleviates human suffering, which is good. And it increases dependence on government, which is bad. Or at least it is bad if you believe in virtues such as personal responsibility and self-reliance. ... MORE
Labels:
entitlements,
food stamps,
government,
handouts,
ObamaCare,
poverty,
responsibility,
welfare
John Stossel: America, The Law-Crazed
A sad result for the land of the free. Over the past few decades, America has locked up more and more people. Our prison population has tripled. Now we jail a higher percentage of people than even the most repressive countries: China locks up 121 out of every 100,000 people; Russia 511. In America? 730. "Never in the civilized world have so many ... MORET.F. Stern: Private Property In Socialist America
Property rights are evaporating like distilled dew. If Rip Van Winkle woke up in America today he’d wonder what happened to private property rights. Imagine finding out other folks can dictate what you can use your property for; this must be some kind of bad dream, go back to sleep and maybe the next time you open your eyes things will ... MORE
Labels:
bureaucracy,
environment,
EPA,
government,
individual liberty,
industry,
mining,
property rights
Robert M. Levy: Obama's War On Individual Liberty
No personal responsibility = no individual liberty. Roger Simon, chief political columnist for Politico, once called President Obama "the greatest orator of modern times." And a week ago last Friday, speaking to supporters in Roanoke, Va., our president proved his ability to communicate to me beyond even Mr. Simon's expectation. ... MORE
Labels:
business,
individual liberty,
Obama,
philosophy,
responsibility,
risk,
self-interest,
welfare state
VIDEO: Obama Dismisses Individual Achievement
Yaron Brook (Ayn Rand Institute) and Terry Jones (IBD) rebut a clueless president.
Marijuana Prohibition Loses Ground To Modern Federalism
Reclaiming a measure of state sovereignty. As a constitutional republic, the US system of government is designed on the principles of federalism. In our federalist system the federal government is one of enumerated powers and those powers not explicitly granted to the federal government are reserved to the states. The framers of the ... MORE
Labels:
Constitution,
drug war,
federalism,
liberty,
marijuana,
policy,
power,
prohibition,
states' rights
Emily Miller: The Assault On Weapons
Gun grabbers wasted no time exploiting Friday’s shooting in Aurora, Colo., by calling for more restrictive firearm laws. Their liberal agenda is off target because, with U.S. gun ownership at its highest level ever, the public sees crime is way down. This blows a hole in the left’s argument, but it doesn’t stop it. Despite the House being strongly pro-gun and the ... MORE
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
