Professor Friedman on imports, exports and exchange rates.
VIDEO: Milton Friedman - Principles Of Trade
Professor Friedman on imports, exports and exchange rates.
R. Dennis Hansen: Losing Our Privacy At A Rapid Rate
Not just the night has a thousand eyes. I work for a resource management agency. Last year, I attended a government-mandated class on the use of computers during work hours. The instructor pointed out that emails that leave our agency’s network are being scanned for content. Our Internet usage is also being monitored. What they are looking ... MORE
Rep. Paul Ryan: Empowering Individuals Or Bureaucrats
The choice and the contrast in health care. In March, as the Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of President Obama's partisan health care law, the American people saw an event that could mark the end of bureaucrat-controlled health care. At the same time, just across the street in the halls of Congress, they witnessed a powerful reaffirmation of ... MORE
Woman Strip Searched At Roadside For Running Stop Sign
Suit claims cops subject woman to public humiliation. A Florida mother who was pulled over by police for driving through a stop sign claims she was then subjected to a nightmarish strip search where her tampon was forcibly removed by an officer. Leila Tarantino is now suing Citrus County Sheriff's Office claiming that she was strip searched ... MORE
Labels:
force,
government,
individual liberty,
law enforcement,
police,
police state,
privacy,
tyranny
Next From The EPA: Four-Gallon-Minimum Gas Purchases
Another "ridiculous and unworkable mandate." The Environmental Protection Agency is going to require all consumers to buy at least four gallons of gasoline from certain gas pumps after the new E15 ethanol-gasoline blend is introduced into the market. The new regulation was revealed in an Aug. 1 letter to the American Motorcyclist ... MORE
Don Watkins: President Obama Vs. My Grandfather
A conflict of visions. My grandfather, a gruff and uneducated but whip-smart guy, started out poor. Following a stint in the Army, he spent a few years working and scrimped together enough money to start his own restaurant in a small town near Philadelphia. He—and the rest of his family—worked incredibly long hours, first to keep the restaurant in ... MORE
Jazz Shaw: Ethanol Plant Reopens Despite Massive Drought
Food dries up, but tax dollars keep flowing. Not too long ago, we took a look at the effect the drought is having on the nation’s farmers, particularly those producing corn. The situation isn’t improving, as is being widely reported, and the farmers are in dire straights. Prices are rising for not only corn for the dinner table, but all the other ... MORE
VIDEO: Thomas Sowell - The Quest For Cosmic Justice
There are two conflicting concepts of justice.
Labels:
achievement,
fairness,
government,
justice,
philosophy,
rules,
socialism,
standards,
tyranny
Michael G. Franc: 'Keep That Pay Raise, I Can't Afford It'
Welfare's upside-down incentive. Does our $927 billion–per–year welfare state discourage the poor from seeking work? Does it cause them to shun pay hikes? Does it, in short, create dependency? This may be the most intractable problem afflicting the welfare state. With a renewed interest in the Clinton-era welfare reform and President Obama’s recent ... MORE
New Warrantless Wiretap Ruling Makes Spying Legal
by Dan Graziano. A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled in favor of President George W. Bush’s controversial Terrorist Surveillance Program, which allows the government to spy on Americans without a warrant. The court reversed an earlier decision in which two American attorneys were awarded more than $20,000 in damages and their lawyers ... MORE
Labels:
court,
government,
privacy,
ruling,
search and seizure,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance,
warrants
VIDEO: SWAT Kills Unarmed Man During Drug Raid
\
Graphic evidence of the sometimes dire consequences of the drug war. In the video released by the Salt Lake Tribune, a member of the Weber-Morgan Narcotics Strike Force repeatedly shoots and kills resident Todd Blair as Blair steps into a hallway holding a golf club like a baseball bat. According to a Tribune article in December, Blair was not the target of the raid. ... MORE
Labels:
death,
drug war,
government,
law enforcement,
police state,
search and seizure,
SWAT,
tyranny
Peter Schiff: The Not So Super Hero
We must stop waiting for a savior. The past week provided clear lessons not just in how central bankers have a limited ability to positively influence the economy but also how they are limited in their capacity to deliver the shortsighted policy actions that investors currently crave. The developments should provide new reasons for investors and ... MORE
The Problem Is There Is No Such Thing As "States' Rights"
by Frank Keegan. When U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois tried to fire up a ballroom full of state legislators here Tuesday morning, he used the phrase “states’ rights.” It popped up a few other times as the National Conference of State Legislatures met for its annual “Build Strong States” summit. The only problem: There is no such thing as “states’ ... MORE
The Number Of Americans Spied Upon Is Too High To Count
by Andrew Napolitano. Gazillions. That's the number of times the federal government has spied on Americans since 9/11 through the use of drones, legal search warrants, illegal search warrants, federal agent-written search warrants and just plain government spying. This is according to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who, when he asked the government to tell him what it was ... MORE
Labels:
drones,
government,
individual liberty,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
secrecy,
suspicion,
tyranny,
warrants
John Stossel: Wars To End War
America needs to reevaluate the military's mission. On his recent trip abroad, Mitt Romney observed an American taboo by not criticizing President Obama's military policy. But before his trip, he made his position clear. Obama has "exposed the military to cuts that no one can justify," Romney said. He meant that unless Congress intervenes ... MORE
Richard E. Ralston: The Separation Of Medicine & State
For politicians, healthcare is all about control. The federal government in general, and the Food and Drug Administration in particular, increasingly inject themselves into direct control of every medical practice. The FDA is aggressively moving past its lock on the approval of every medication and all medical equipment. It now seeks control ... MORE
Labels:
bureaucracy,
Congress,
control,
FDA,
government,
health care,
medicine,
politicians,
politics
Carrie Lucas: Let's Make Education Big Business
Utilize profit, loss and high pay for top performance. When you see that Americans spend more than $1.1 trillion on education—that’s 7.8 percent of GDP—it’s tempting to call education “big business.” Except that it’s not really: 80 percent of that spending is controlled by government and spent on public schools and universities. That means that it’s ... MORE
Doug Bandow: Killing The Economy With Gov't Stimulus
Death by spending. President Barack Obama’s presidency hangs in the balance after another disappointing employment report. He continues to advocate new government “stimulus” programs to boost his reelection campaign. However, Washington is awash in government “stimulus,” without effect. Only productive private investment will spark economic ... MORE
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)