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  • West Virginia School District Muscles Homeschoolers

    Published December 7, 2014
    Opinion -
    Homeschooling families in Ritchie County, West Virginia have been subjected to a barrage of phone calls from the local school district intended to convince them to reenroll their children in public schools. Some parents considered the calls harassment.
  • Yes Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus, and 2014 Is Not the Warmest Year on Record

    Published December 7, 2014
    Opinion -
    On December 2, 2014, Dr. Roy Spencer posted on the Internet University of Alabama-Huntsville satellite global temperature data for November 2014 of 0.33 degree Centigrade.
  • Paying Students for Achievement: Does It Work?

    Published December 6, 2014
    Opinion -
    Access to money, even play money, becomes increasingly important as students get older and discover that meeting many of their wants requires having money.
  • Program Assists Students Who Need a Little Help to Finish College

    Published December 6, 2014
    Opinion -
    Until only a few years ago, the public was largely unaware a large number of college students fall short of graduation for lack of relatively small amounts of money to pay a final year’s tuition or buy books or even to repair a car in order to get to
  • Cost of Prescription Drug Development

    Published December 5, 2014
    Opinion -
    I did a podcast interview with Yevgeniy Feyman of the Manhattan Institute, which went up on the Heartland site this morning. We discussed a new study showing it costs about $2.
  • Harmful Consequences of EU Climate Policy

    Published December 5, 2014
    Opinion -
    Climate Change Weekly #149 The European Union’s (EU) unilateral efforts to tackle climate change have been a disaster for the economy and the region’s people.
  • Hawaii State Hospital Ignores Court Order to Maintain Union Job Trust

    Published December 5, 2014
    Opinion -
    A federal court order is being ignored so union members at the Hawaii State Hospital can manipulate work rules to boost their pay, according to a Hawaii State Senate investigative committee report released in October.
  • Missouri Students Forced to Accept Substandard Education

    Published December 5, 2014
    Opinion -
    In the wake of the tragic death of Michael Brown, Ferguson, Missouri has taken the national stage for all the wrong reasons. Segregation, poverty, police brutality; name the civil rights issue and, rightly or wrongly, Ferguson has become the poster child.
  • The Gruberization of Environmental Policies

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    Former White House medical consultant Jonathan Gruber pocketed millions of taxpayer dollars before infamously explaining how ObamaCare was enacted. “Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage,” he said.
  • KIPP Plans to Double Enrollment in Los Angeles

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    KIPP schools have a lofty plan for expansion in one major city, doubling enrollment over the next six years. In a plan published in October, KIPP LA announced a goal of operating 20 schools serving 9,000 students by 2020.
  • Study: Bad Zoning Policies Lead to Economic Stagnation

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    A team of New York-based researchers has found policies intended to preserve historic neighborhoods resulted in depressed economic activity, as such regulations discourage developers from investing in the communities.
  • To Tackle National Debt, Sizing up the Problem is Key Step

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    At some point between Thanksgiving and December 1, the federal government made history, as the value of outstanding U.S. Treasury securities exceeded $18 trillion—that’s an 18 with 12 trailing zeroes.
  • The Net Neutrality Hybrid Proposals: They Definitely Are Not Comfortable

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    Let me ask you this: “If a man has one foot in a bucket of boiling water and the other foot in a bucket of ice, do you think that, on average, he would be comfortable?”Answer: Not really.
  • Congress Moves to Block EPA’s Land Grab

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    Republican lawmakers are pushing hard to corral President Obama’s rogue Environmental Protection Agency with stringent bills and a blunt warning against finalizing its most dangerous land grab ever, the pending redefinition of “Waters of the United
  • Three States Rush to Tie Common Core Testing to Graduation

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    Three states are rushing ahead to integrate Common Core testing into their education systems. New Jersey, Maryland, and Washington state will tie graduation to Common Core tests.
  • More Victims of Obamacare

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    It's hard to keep track of all the you-passed-it-so-we-could-see-what's-in-it-and-now-we-see-it-sucks moments that Americans have had since Obamacare passed, but here's another one to add to the list, courtesy of Kaiser Health News:Obamacare 'Glitch'
  • Testing May Discourage Parent Involvement, Study Finds

    Published December 4, 2014
    Opinion -
    Saying there was little research about how extensive testing in education impacted parental attitudes toward education, Jesse Rhodes studied the issue in early 2012.
  • Hayek’s Warning: The Social Engineer’s Pretense of Knowledge

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    Forty years ago, on December 11, 1974, Austrian economist, Friedrich A. Hayek, formally received that year’s Nobel Prize in Economics at the official ceremonies in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Low-Income D.C. Students Denied Scholarships Despite Law Giving Them Preference

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    Some Washington, DC children are being denied participation in the Opportunity Scholarship Program, which gives students from low-income families scholarships to attend private schools, despite a law giving preference to these students with siblings in
  • Maine, Michigan Voters Go Opposite Directions on Wildlife Management

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    For the second time in ten years, voters in Maine rejected a ban on baiting, trapping, or hounding bears for hunting purposes.
  • Teachers Unions Fume in Philly

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    The teachers unions are spitting venom at the Philadelphia School Reform Commission. The PSRC—an appointed body—was established in 2001 as a response to overall school district ineptitude. It didn’t help much.
  • HHS: Medicare Buys Drugs for Dead People

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    A report from the Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General recently found Medicare has reimbursed the cost of drugs for beneficiaries who were already dead, pointing to fraudulent diversion of expensive medicines into the black market.
  • Jindal Joins Another Lawsuit Against Common Core

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    In a continued push to overturn the implementation of Common Core standards and testing in schools, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal joined forces with lawmakers in a lawsuit against Louisiana state education officials.
  • The Coming Battle Over Obamacare Replacement

    Published December 3, 2014
    Opinion -
    Consumer Power Report #447[Subscribe] Now that Republicans have taken both houses of Congress, it is likely they will in the spring pass an Obamacare replacement that will land on President Barack Obama’s desk to be vetoed.

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