Gary Johnson: Time To Repeal The Patriot Act
The Patriot Act is not for patriots. Ten years ago, we learned that the fastest way to pass a bad law is to  call it the ‘Patriot Act’ and force Congress to vote on it in the  immediate wake of a horrible attack on the United States. The irony is  that there is really very little about the Patriot Act that is  patriotic. Instead, it has turned out to be yet another tool the    ... MOREEd Feulner: Onerous Effects Of Overrugulation
Small business wrapped in red tape.    We keep hearing that the economy is in a “jobless recovery.” What’s  holding American companies back? Why aren’t they hiring more people? High  taxes draw a lot of attention, and rightly so. They depress investment  and discourage innovation. But escalating regulatory costs also  undermine our  ... MOREJohn Stossel: Politicians Fiddle While Fiscal Crisis Looms
Imagine this family budget: Last year, you earned $24,700. But you spent $37,900, incurring $13,300 in debt, and you were already $153,500 in debt. So you say, "I promise I'll spend $300 less this year!" Anyone can see that your cutback is pathetic and that you need to spend  much  less. Yet if you add eight zeroes, that's America's budget. The president says ... MORE
Thomas Sowell: Academic Hyprocrisy
Time for academics to start pointing the finger inward.    It is fascinating to see people accusing others of things that they  themselves are doing, especially when their own sins are worse. Academics love to say that businesses are not paying enough to people who work for them. But where in  business are there people who are paid absolutely nothing for   ... MORE
Labels:
academic,
college,
education,
free market,
history,
indoctrination,
politics,
students,
teachers
Arthur Caplan: Your Privacy For A Low Price
Your privacy is gone, and it’s never coming back.    A report that Target accidentally disclosed a teen girl’s pregnancy to  her father shows the logical extreme to which retailers can take the  search for more information about their customers. This is what happens when you hand the cashier at your local drug store  or grocery store any of a zillion plastic reward  ... MORE
Labels:
banking,
capitalism,
consumer,
database,
individual liberty,
information,
Internet,
privacy,
risk
Ira Stoll: Why Capitalism Isn't Going Anywhere
Only system know to increase both growth and freedom. At the height of the financial crisis in late 2008 and early 2009, a wave of articles declared the end of capitalism. A half-dozen reporters writing about the issue called Allan Meltzer, who since 1957 has been teaching about capitalism at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.       ... MORE
Labels:
bureaucracy,
capitalism,
crisis,
freedom,
government,
growth,
lawyers,
politicians,
regulation
Carol Williams: California Gun Owners Are Optimistic
Emerging strategy to restore lost gun rights. Chuck Michel's strategy for crime-fighting rests on the element of  surprise: Keep the bad guys guessing who's armed and who's not. "If  5% of the ducks could shoot back, you're not going to go duck hunting,"  said the Long Beach lawyer representing many Californians denied  concealed weapons permits and, in his view, their  ... MORE
Labels:
concealed carry,
court,
government,
gun rights,
individual liberty,
justice,
regulation,
rights
Mark Steyn: Contraception Misdirection
Like handing out condoms on the Titanic. Have you seen the official White House version of what the New York Times  headline writers call “A Responsible Budget”? My favorite bit is Chart  5-1 on page 58 of their 500-page appendix on “Analytical Perspectives.”  This is entitled “Publicly Held Debt Under 2013 Budget Policy Projections.” It’s a straight through your  ... MOREMike Silva: PC Police Disarm Old Houston Uniform
Nauseating MLB political correctness at it again.    Yesterday I wrote at Sports Media Watchdog about the public overreaction to the ESPN “Chink in the Armor” story; today I came across a story about MLB messing with tradition in the name of political correctness. Last September, the League prevented the Mets from wearing hats  honoring first       ... MORE
Labels:
free speech,
guns,
history,
indoctrination,
liberalism,
policy,
political correctness,
rules
Walter E Williams: Math Mattters
Hard work and discipline pay dividends.   If one manages to graduate from high school without the rudiments of  algebra, geometry and trigonometry, there are certain relatively  high-paying careers probably off-limits for life -- such as careers in  architecture, chemistry, medicine computer programming, engineering and certain technical fields.    ... MORE
The Economist: America Is Tangled Up In Green Tape
The chaotic state of overregulation.  Pity the engineers responsible for keeping America’s coal-fired power plants  up to standard. Late last year a court halted the adoption of new  regulations on interstate air pollution that would have affected lots of  them—just two days before they were due to go into force. The suspended  regulations, in turn, were themselves a   ... MORE
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