How your life became an open e-book. In 1986 The American Banker defined E-mail as
"a trademark of CompuServe," Computerworld noted that
sending a single message required a 10-minute phone call, and
InfoWorld described "a pilot scheme that will allow users
of one system to send messages to mailbox holders on another." That
was the year ... MOREJacob Sullum: Fine Print In Government's Privacy Policy
How your life became an open e-book. In 1986 The American Banker defined E-mail as
"a trademark of CompuServe," Computerworld noted that
sending a single message required a 10-minute phone call, and
InfoWorld described "a pilot scheme that will allow users
of one system to send messages to mailbox holders on another." That
was the year ... MORECarbon Tax Could Come After Fiscal Cliff Deal
by William Bigelow. According to one former member of the White House Climate Change Task Force under President Clinton, President Obama may have plans to implement a carbon tax as soon as the fiscal cliff negotiations are settled. Forget the fact that Obama and his minions have repeatedly protested that they won’t press for a carbon tax, Paul ... MOREBrian Siegal: America Inching Toward Police State
Citizens under the microscope. Remember, remember the ninth of November. It was a day not unlike any other, but a day that is yet another constantly overlooked reminder of the terrible state of this great nation. It is the day David Petraeus’ resignation was accepted. So, wonderful American citizens, I’d like to take this time to have a ... MORE
Labels:
CIA,
FBI,
General Petraeus,
individual liberty,
investigation,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Marijuana Legalization Poses Threat To Prison Industry
For-profit prisons fear bleak outlook. Does the move toward legalization of marijuana pose a threat to the for-profit prison industry? On November 6th, voters in Colorado and Washington passed referenda legalizing the recreational use of marijuana. It is not clear yet how federal enforcement officials will respond to the new laws in practice, ... MOREWalter E Williams: Parting Company
Secession is really the battle for self-determination. For decades, it has been obvious that there are irreconcilable differences between Americans who want to control the lives of others and those who wish to be left alone. Which is the more peaceful solution: Americans using the brute force of government to beat liberty-minded ... MORERonald Bailey: Why Economic Backwardness Persists
Empower the elites. Why do some societies maintain institutions that cause economic
backwardness? This is the vital question that MIT economist Daron
Acemoglu and Harvard economist James Robinson asked in their
seminal 2006 article, “Economic
Backwardness in Political Perspective” in the American
Political Science Review. ... MOREThomas Sowell: Jensen And Flynn
Trivializing politically incorrect findings. Anyone who has followed the decades-long controversies over the role of genes in IQ scores will recognize the names of the two leading advocates of opposite conclusions on that subject— Professor Arthur R. Jensen of the University of California at Berkeley and Professor James R. Flynn, an American expatriate ... MORERobert Rector: 'Poverty' Like We've Never Seen It
The definition of poor keeps expanding. The federal government now considers a family of four in New York City to be poor if its pre-tax income is below $37,900.Even with full medical coverage. The calculation helps explain why newly revised Census Bureau figures hike the number of poor Americans to 49 million as of last year, further widening ... MOREGovernment Regulators Have Alcohol In Their Crosshairs
Is alcohol the new soda? Last week a
new study released by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) reported that American adults drink alcoholic
beverages in moderation. Calories from alcohol, the study
concludes, make up 5 percent of the total calories consumed by
American adults. What's more, few Americans consume alcohol ... MORESupreme Court Blocks Law Prohibiting Taping Of Police
Light allowed to shine on police activities. The U.S. Supreme Court has blocked enforcement of an Illinois law that prohibited people from recording police officers on the job. The justices on Monday left in place a lower court ruling that found that the state's anti-eavesdropping law violates free speech rights when used against people ... MORECarol Roth: Insider Trading Should Be Legalized
Information makes the market efficient. Former SAC Capital trader Mathew Martoma’s insider trading investigation is
just one of a bevy of high-profile insider trading cases that have come
to light in the past few years and I think spending time and effort on
these cases is a farce. Should
the allegations prove to be true, I am not ... MORE
Labels:
crime,
economics,
incentives,
information,
insider trading,
invest,
law,
legalize,
stock market
Manny Fernandez: 'Secession Fever' Hits Texas
The bumper stickers are everywhere. In the weeks since President Obama’s re-election, Republicans around the country have been wondering how to proceed. Some conservatives in Texas have been asking a far more pointed question: how to secede. Secession fever has struck parts of Texas, which Mitt Romney won by nearly 1.3 million votes. ... MOREYaron Brook: Why The Glass-Steagall Myth Persists
Lies about the free market. The growth of government intervention over the last century was built on the back of a handful of myths. A generation ago, the dominant myth was that free markets had caused the Great Depression, a falsehood ultimately debunked by economists like Milton Friedman. Today, the key myth is ... MOREMore Evidence Of Growing Police State in America
California man jailed four days for recording cops. A California man was jailed for four days for attempting to record police officers on a public street. Daniel J. Saulmon was charged with resisting, delaying and obstructing an officer
but the video shows he was standing well out the way of a traffic stop
and was only arrested when ... MOREThomas DiLorenzo: The American Tradition Of Secession
"This country was born through secession." Leftists and neocons in the media who tend to agree on the propriety and desirability of an ever-growing welfare/warfare/police state were predictably apoplectic when Ron Paul recently stated on his House Web site that secession is "a deeply American principle." Congressman Paul ... MORE
Labels:
Founding Fathers,
history,
police state,
Ron Paul,
secession,
states' rights,
war,
welfare state
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