Sympathy for the plight of lawbreakers. Most laws are meant to stop people from doing something, and to penalize those who disregard those laws. More generally, laws are meant to protect the society from the law breakers. But our immigration laws are different. Here the whole focus is on the "plight" of those who have broken the laws, and on ... MOREThomas Sowell: Immigration Sophistry
Sympathy for the plight of lawbreakers. Most laws are meant to stop people from doing something, and to penalize those who disregard those laws. More generally, laws are meant to protect the society from the law breakers. But our immigration laws are different. Here the whole focus is on the "plight" of those who have broken the laws, and on ... MOREMoises Naim: The End Of Power
A takeover by the micropowers. Power is shifting—from large, stable armies to loose bands of
insurgents, from corporate leviathans to nimble start-ups, from
presidential palaces to public squares. It has become harder to
wield power and easier to lose it, and the world is becoming less
predictable as a result. As people become more ... MORE
Labels:
authority,
bureaucracy,
economics,
individualism,
medicine,
politics,
power,
wealth,
weapons
Grover Norquist: One Hundred Years Of Tax Servitude
Happy birthday: The income tax is now 100 years old. In 1913, the 16th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified by three-fourths of the then-48 states. Stop me if you have heard this one, but the federal income tax was pushed by progressives who felt the rich should pay their fair share. They promised that only really rich people would have ... MORE
Labels:
Constitution,
federal,
income tax,
middle class,
Obama,
politicians,
standard of living,
tax
Walter E Williams: Price Versus Cost
The stifling effect of taxation. Suppose you buy a gallon of gas for $3. How much did it cost you? You
say, "Williams, that's a silly question. It cost $3." That's where
you're mistaken, because there's a difference between price and cost. To
prove that price and cost are not the same, consider the following.
Suppose you live and work in New York ... MOREFBI: You Might Be A Terrorist If You Breathe
Labels:
cell phones,
database,
FBI,
government,
individual liberty,
police state,
suspicion,
terrorism
Being Born Poor Doesn't Mean You Will Stay Poor
by Yaron Brook and Don Watkins. Long after he had established himself as one of America’s leading businessmen, as well as history’s greatest steelmaker, Andrew Carnegie reflected that “We all live in the richest and freest country in the world, where no man is limited except by his own mental attitude and his own desires.” At the time—a ... MORENY Parents Demand Schools Dumb Down
Boycott planned against new math and English tests. New York state education officials have been sounding the alarm for months: English and math tests that students will take this week and next will be harder than before and scores will drop. A video from the state Education Department warns, "We expect them to be lower." Statewide, ... MOREHow Free Markets And Ingenuity Can Save The Planet
by Ronald Bailey. “We are a plague on the Earth. It’s coming home to roost
over the next 50 years or so,”
warned the famed British television naturalist David
Attenborough in the January Radio Times. He added: “It’s
not just climate change; it’s sheer space, places to grow food for
this enormous horde. Either we limit our population growth or
the ... MOREScott Miller: Nullification Is For Nutcases? Hardly
After all, there is a Tenth Amendment. Some people want you to believe that only crazy people support
resisting federal power on a state or local level. They’re wrong. In a snarky, condescending article titled, “SC Nullification – Are these guys nuts?,”
published in several Palmetto State newspapers, Phil Noble promoted the
most repeated ... MOREJohn Stossel - Government Plays Favorites
People say government must "help the little guy, promote equality, level the playing field." People often go into government to do that. But even when people mean well, it's natural for them to help out their cronies. David Stockman, who ran the Office of Management and Budget under Ronald Reagan, was criticized for saying the ... MOREBen Wolfgang: Obama's Tax On The Pursuit Of Happiness
Sets his sights on vodka, golf and cigarettes. President Obama’s budget doesn’t just go after wealthy Americans. It’s
also got new taxes on vodka, cigarettes and other unexpected items, ABC News reported. The fiscal 2014 spending plan, which looks to raise about $1.8 trillion in new revenue, also tackles golf courses, which can no longer be counted ... MORETax Freedom Day 2013 Is Five Days Later Than Last Year
The day you begin earning money for yourself. April 18 will be Tax Freedom Day, the day when Americans have worked
enough to pay all of their federal and state taxes for 2013 – a round
total of $4.22 trillion, according to an analysis done by the Tax Foundation. That's five days later than in 2012. Americans will pay more than $2.76 trillion in ... MOREConn Carroll: American Energy Revolutionized By Fracking
As green energy failed. It's hard to remember now that President Obama's agenda has degenerated into a sham gun control bill with loopholes big enough to drive a Mack truck through, but back in 2008, progressives had big dreams about how to reshape the entire U.S. economy, starting with the energy sector. For years, liberal ... MORE
Labels:
energy,
environment,
fossil fuels,
fracking,
government,
green,
high speed rail,
Obama,
Solyndra
Mark Hendrickson: Big Brother Is Increasingly Watching You
Every breath you take, every move you make. One of the most hotly debated of all individual rights is the right to privacy. Generations of immigrants came to the United States
to escape religious persecution, economic oppression, and the danger of
becoming embroiled in the Old World’s frequently recurring wars. These
reasons are variations ... MORE
Labels:
First Amendment,
Founding Fathers,
government,
individual liberty,
privacy,
secrecy,
tyranny
Paul Lilly: Florida Bans Internet Cafes
There was too much freedom going on. Well, it's official. Florida governor Rick Scott signed into legislation the "Internet Cafe Ban," which effectively closed down around 1,000 such establishments in the state. The ban went into effect immediately, though some cafes shut their doors a week ago under the assumption that the ban would go through. ... MORE
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