Banks Create Money out of Thin Air. What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
You might rightfully wonder: How can a bank, like the neighborhood bank down the street, “create
Is The Federal Reserve Already Done Raising Rates?
Ryan and Robert Aro take a look at the Fed's unconvincing explanation of why it has
The Consequences of Regulation: How GDPR Is Preventing AI
Jennifer Huddleston Recently, the Irish Data Protection Commission halted the launch of Google’s new artificial intelligence (AI)
China Calls Out the USA for Instigating the Infamous Color Revolutions
As geopolitical tensions rise, the Chinese political leadership tells the US government to desist pushing its "color
The FTC Should Answer Its Call of Duty to Gamers
All too often, unscrupulous businesses weaponize the United States’ antitrust laws—which are only supposed to be
Nicotine E‑Cigarettes Might Do More than Save the Lives of People with Schizophrenia
Jeffrey A. Singer Mental health practitioners have long known that cigarette smoking is prevalent among people with
School World Order
John Klyczek joins Michael on the first episode of REKT. John (jakE) is the author of School World
Sound Money Is Required for Real Budget Discipline
The usual suspects are "relieved" that Congress gave President Biden what he wanted on the so-called
There Are Limits to What Testing Tells Us, But The Latest Scores Are Troubling
Neal McCluskey Today we received the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Long‐Term Trend results, this
Assumptions Matter Both in Economics and in the Real World
To explain Japan’s economic problems, Paul Krugman employed a model that assumes people are identical and