by Daniel Greenfield. The biggest emotional bully wins. First, complaints of emotional distress are way up. Nearly all of the campus mental-health directors surveyed in 2013 by the American College Counseling Association reported that the number of students with severe psychological problems was rising at their schools. The rate of ... MOREPolitical Correctness Makes College Students Mentally Ill
by Daniel Greenfield. The biggest emotional bully wins. First, complaints of emotional distress are way up. Nearly all of the campus mental-health directors surveyed in 2013 by the American College Counseling Association reported that the number of students with severe psychological problems was rising at their schools. The rate of ... MORETimothy Williams: Facial Recognition Software Used To Identify Terrorists Now Deployed By The Local Police
'Public servants' treat citizens as potential suspects. Facial recognition software, which American military and intelligence agencies used for years in Iraq and Afghanistan to identify potential terrorists, is being eagerly adopted by dozens of police departments around the country to pursue drug dealers, prostitutes and other conventional ... MORE
Labels:
authority,
government,
identification,
law enforcement,
police,
police state,
privacy,
suspicion
Kristie Eshelman: Big Government Is Hurting Millennials
Is political greed gobbling up America's future? USA Today recently pointed out: One in seven young people neither works nor goes to school. This group of Americans is roughly the size of Minnesota's population. And today, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its job numbers report. While the youth unemployment rate is down ... MORE
Labels:
business,
economics,
government,
incentives,
opportunity,
politicians,
spending,
unemployment
Conservative Coal Towns Are Being Destroyed
by Stephen Moore. Here’s today’s political quiz question: what do these five states — Rhode Island, Vermont, California, Oregon and Maine — have in common. Yes they are blue states ruled by Democrats, but that’s not all. These are the states that use the least amount of coal — less than 2 percent — for electric power. In fact, almost all of the states ... MORE
Labels:
coal,
conservative,
Democrats,
government,
Obama,
regulation,
Republican,
restrictions,
states
Lloyd Marcus: Why Liberals Are Dangerous
The emotion over reason advocates. The Left (liberal mainstream media) practically had a ticker tape parade for Ohio Gov. John Kasich for answers he gave on two issues during the GOP debate. Liberals' praise of Kasich shows they have chosen emotion over logical, reasoned thinking. This makes liberals irresponsible and dangerous. These people ... MORE
Labels:
campaign,
compassion,
debate,
entitlements,
politicians,
Republican,
vote-buying,
welfare state
Explaining Jury Nullification To A Sitting Judge
by Scott Shackford. I spent a day last week immersed in Los Angeles County's immense judicial system downtown after being summoned to jury duty. My experience was not quite as vividly terrible as Matt Welch's in New York,
partly because Los Angeles lets you complete your questionnaire and
orientation videos online well in advance, and thus I was ... MOREChris Christie And Rand Paul Reflect The Clash Between The GOP's Authoritarian And Libertarian Tendencies
by Jacob Sullum. One of the most telling moments in last week's Republican presidential debate came when moderator Megyn Kelly asked New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie to defend his position that Rand Paul, the Kentucky senator, should be held responsible for the next terrorist attack on Americans because he opposes the National Security Agency's ... MORE
Labels:
Chris Christie,
government,
NSA,
politics,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Augur Could Be The Greatest Gambling Platform In History. Is There Anything The Government Can Do To Stop It?
by Jim Epstein. The wisdom of the crowds. An online gambling platform could do to the neighborhood bookie what electric refrigerators did to the ice delivery man. Coming this fall, Augur will allow participants to wager money on any future event of their choosing. Software will set the odds, collect the bets, and disperse the winnings. The price alone ... MORE
Fiscally Responsible Republican? Scott Walker To Commit $400 Million In Taxpayer Dollars For New NBA Stadium Deal
by Nick Gillespie. While ongoing reportage of the Donald Trump Traveling Tijuana Donkey Show crashes into the latest revelations from Hillary Clinton's Personal Email Server Fun Times Revue, there's a more pedestrian scandal taking place in plain sight. This one involves Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who's running on
his tough-as-nails budget ... MORE
Nico Sell: It’s Time To Build The Private Web
A place for private communication and uncensored info. The establishment of the U.S. Postal Service was one of the most visionary civil liberties ideas of its time. It was deeply rooted in George Washington’s belief that a strong state and society can only exist if every citizen has access to uncensored information and can freely communicate, ... MOREDrug War Update - Jacob Sullum: Texas Cops Sexually Assault Another Motorist In The Name Of Pot Prohibition
Another warrantless roadside cavity probe. What is it with Texas cops and roadside vaginal searches? Last May I described
three strikingly similar cases in which Texas troopers fruitlessly
looked for marijuana in the private parts of women pulled over for minor
traffic offenses. The incidents were outrageous enough to inspire a new ... MORE
Labels:
drug war,
government,
police,
police state,
prohibition,
sex offenders,
tactics,
warrantless search
Prison Sentences Based On Crimes Not Yet Committed
by Barry-Jester, Casselman and Goldstein. Criminal sentencing has long been based on the present crime and, sometimes, the defendant’s past criminal record. In Pennsylvania, judges could soon consider a new dimension: the future. Pennsylvania is on the verge of becoming one of the first states in the country to base criminal sentences not only on ... MORE
Labels:
crime,
incarceration,
justice,
penalties,
profiling,
punishment,
risk,
sentencing,
statistics
Thomas Sowell: A Debatable 'Debate'
An illustration of what's wrong with the media. The so-called "debates," among too many Republicans to have a debate, are yet another painful sign of how much words and ideas have degenerated in our times. No one expects these televised sound bites and "gotcha" questions to be anything like the historic Lincoln-Douglas debates on the ... MORE
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

