Department of Agriculture Bureaucracy
Chris Edwards Congress is scheduled to consider a major farm bill this year, which will reauthorize many U.S.
Idaho Leads the Nation Toward Expanding Pharmacists’ Scope of Practice
Marc Joffe With the national shortage of doctors and the cost of visiting a physician, policymakers should be
Argentines Are All Peronists No Longer
Daniel Raisbeck “We are all Peronists,” remarked Argentina’s corporatist strongman Juan Domingo Perón in 1972, the year
Australian Study on Opioid Prescribing Is the Latest to Challenge the False Narrative about the Cause of the Overdose Crisis
Jeffrey A. Singer This month Australian researchers published the results of a population cohort study that followed the
Friday Feature: Stossel in the Classroom
Colleen Hroncich Continuing last week’s theme, Stossel in the Classroom (SITC) is another great resource for educators
Can Bay Area Political Leaders Solve Climate Change?
Marc Joffe Passing laws, adopting regulations, and spending money to fight climate change are popular activities for
Biden’s Student Loan Repayment Plan Poses Danger to Taxpayers
Neal McCluskey The Biden administration has big plans for smaller federal student debt repayment. Arguably the centerpiece
Cutting Farm Subsidies
Chris Edwards The bipartisan debt‐ceiling deal passed in June reflected a new congressional focus on spending restraint. Congress
George Will: Overcoming Constitutional Queasiness to Head Off a Fiscal Crisis
Romina Boccia Conservative Washington Post columnist George Will wrote about an idea I’ve been pitching for several