by Michael F. Cannon | Feb 1, 2024 | Healthcare
Biden’s proposal would eliminate consumer protections, throw sick patients out of their health insurance, and leave them to face sky-high medical bills without insurance for up to one year.
by Peter C. Earle | Jan 30, 2024 | Economics
The idea that hundreds of thousands of businesses have colluded to raise prices to boost their profit margins and in so doing, engineered the inflation that continues to afflict Americans — is easily disproven.
by Paul Steidler | Jan 29, 2024 | Europe, Regulation
Pandering to the EU to go after U.S. companies makes no sense. It needlessly cedes national sovereignty with no tangible benefits for the United States.
by Michael N. Peterson | Jan 25, 2024 | Movies
Welsh journalist Gareth Jones stood for truth. New York Times reporter Walter Duranty stood for lies. Duranty received the Pulitzer Prize. Jones was brutally murdered by the Soviets.
by Gary Galles | Jan 25, 2024 | History
Penn’s commitment to a free society needs our re-commitment.
by Michael F. Cannon | Jan 19, 2024 | Books
If you support universal health care and the right of patients to make their own health decisions, there might be more for you in Recovery than you might think. I hope you’ll give it a look.
by Brian Phillips | Jan 18, 2024 | Space
The essence of Jacobin Magazine’s argument is that it isn’t fair that some get to enjoy things most of us can’t afford. If everyone can’t enjoy luxuries, then nobody should be allowed to. This is an example of what Ayn Rand called “hatred of the good for being the good.”
by Andrew Bernstein | Jan 17, 2024 | History
That innovative black Americans flourished in late 19th- and early 20th-century America is a little-known part of our Capitalist heritage.
by Joakim Book | Jan 16, 2024 | Books
Maarten Prak and Jan Luiten van Zanden show in their new book Pioneers of Capitalism: The Netherlands 1000-1800 that the Dutch preindustrial history of growth, trade, and reliance on markets for their daily bread changed well before the mid-1600s.