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  • April 21, 2003
    New York Post
    Keeping the Nation at Risk: How the Teacher Unions Block Reforms
    … than they were in 1983. For example, teacher union membership and revenues have escalated, and the unions’ stranglehold on education policy — typified by the failure to include private school choice in the No Child Left Behind Act — is as strong …
    By David F. Salisbury
  • July 24, 2002
    Cato.org
    Fighting the Patent Wars
    … not always. At least, according to BAM member General Motors Corp. Merrill Matthews, a visiting scholar at the Institute for Policy Innovation points out that GM strongly opposes what it terms “imitation parts,” because they may wear out sooner and …
    By Doug Bandow
  • June 3, 2015
    Blog
    Response to Bryan Caplan
    … to stay after getting passed the increased border security, they decided to send for their families and settle here. Later policies like the 3/10 year bars and the post-9/11 increase in border security combined with the Great …
    By Alex Nowrasteh
  • November 25, 2010
    Reason
    A Simple Way to Improve Medicare
    … accept that in full or charge $100 or $120 or whatever to his patients. Most doctors individualized their balance billing policy. Elderly patients of modest means on fixed incomes would commonly see their balance waived or significantly reduced. Those more …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • October 26, 2023
    Reason
    Prosecutors Turn Their Extortion Racket against Facebook and Instagram
    Prosecutors Turn Their Extortion Racket against Facebook and Instagram
    … of oxycodone designed to extend its pain‐​relieving effect, in 1996. A recent study published in the Yale Law and Policy Review found that “only 9.0% of all nonmedical opioid users in 2001 reported ever using OxyContin during their …
    By Jeffrey A. Singer
  • August 21, 2012
    The Wall Street Journal
    The Hidden Flaw of ‘Energy Efficiency’
    … growing body of research on rebounds means that both the left and the right must rethink their stances on energy policy. Some efficiency regulations may be worth their costs, but the existence of rebound means that the nation can no …
    By Robert J. Michaels
  • April 22, 2011
    Blog
    More on AEP v. Connecticut: Sue the Butterflies or Regulate Them?
    … those brought by environmental advocacy groups trying to force agencies to live up to the groups’ idea of sound environmental policy. The NY Times, for example, reported recently on the “barrage [that] has paralyzed the listing process” for the Endangered …
    By Trevor Burrus
  • March 12, 2024
    Forbes.com
    Two House Hearings Display Foundational Principles Are at Risk
    Two House Hearings Display Foundational Principles Are at Risk
    Many people believe that conservative members of Congress reliably protect private markets from government intervention and uphold constitutional principles. Unfortunately, history has often proven otherwise, especially when it comes to financial markets.
    By Norbert Michel
  • November 21, 2023
    Blog
    Argentina's Paradigm Shift
    Argentina’s Paradigm Shift
    If Milei were only able to implement dollarization, it would be a great achievement.
    By Ian Vásquez
  • March 28, 2018
    Journal Star
    Counterpoint: College Hoops, Heal Thyself
    What all these competing values and concerns tell us is not what reforms to impose, but that there is no one, clear answer.
    By Neal McCluskey
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