by Mark Da Cunha | Feb 7, 2000 | Cuba & Castro
It is Cuba’s totalitarian economy (socialism) that is the cause of her economic woes.
by Dr Michael Hurd | Feb 6, 2000 | POLITICS
President Clinton is angry because Americans supposedly waste too much food, especially at holiday time. World hunger is not a problem of redistribution. World hunger does not exist because you throw out half a stick of butter or an unfinished Coke. The real problem... by Richard Parker M.D. | Feb 5, 2000 | POLITICS
Bill Clinton is not leaving quietly, certainly not when it comes to health care. In a Presidential and Congressional election year and in a cultural climate where the public has been “educated” to believe that health care is an entitlement, Clinton is... by Robert W Tracinski | Feb 4, 2000 | POLITICS
The rioting and demonstrations at the World Trade Organization in Seattle offered us a view of a world in which everything is upside-down and backwards. It is a world in which hordes of middle-class students and $25-an-hour union workers band together to take away... by Andrew West | Feb 3, 2000 | POLITICS
I’ve worked as an equity analyst and portfolio manager for about eight years now, focusing on international markets. The question that I and most others in my profession are constantly asking ourselves is, “is the market wrong about this?” As a... by Chris Wolski | Feb 2, 2000 | History
With the publication of Atlas Shrugged in 1957, Ayn Rand’s position in history — both as novelist and philosopher — was established.
by Andrew Lewis | Jan 27, 2000 | Abortion, Elections
The race for the Republican presidential nomination resembles a piety test over a single issue: the right to abortion.
by Robert W Tracinski | Jan 27, 2000 | Antitrust & Monopolies
The judge’s “finding of fact” in the Microsoft antitrust trial has declared the company to be a dangerous monopoly, which will now be open to punishment by the courts–including everything from regulation to a complete breakup of the company.... by Andrew West | Jan 25, 2000 | POLITICS
In my last article, I talked about the contradictory nature of the economic theories representing various schools of thought, and the fact that some of the most useful theories, those of the Supply-side school, are receiving the least amount of attention. Many of the...