You Can’t Run a Government “Like a Business”
Calls for finding efficiencies in government by electing or appointing people to “run it like a business” are futile.
Calls for finding efficiencies in government by electing or appointing people to “run it like a business” are futile.
Instead of Medicare for All, the plan should be called “VA Care for All,” with the increase in preventable deaths that comes with it.
Regulation of immigrants was almost exclusively the domain of state governments during the first 100 years of the United States. Many doubted if federal involvement was Constitutional.
While it is true that factory jobs have fallen by approximately seven million since 1979, manufacturing output has climbed more than one-fifth since 2006.
The answer to why people continue to work in such deplorable conditions is pretty simple: they don’t have any other options.
Thanks to markets, living standards continue to go up globally, although many predicted that the earth was going to run out of resources decades ago.
Why attack the most vulnerable in our society, who benefit enormously from inexpensive imported retail goods?
Far and Wide leaves us wondering if Peart applies the same demands for empirical proof to bleeding heart government policies.
The sooner we stop conflating “technology” with “coin,” the sooner we will have a better understanding of what is and is not sound money.
The Federal Reserve is not politically independent — and it never was.