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Daily Dose of Reason -
Politics & Government
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Written by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.
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Wednesday, 08 February 2012 00:00 |
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Obama says the unemployment numbers -- down slightly -- are good news. Critics say these unemployment numbers are mostly a reflection of the fact that more Americans are giving up on employment permanently, and therefore are no longer figured in the statistics.
Don't the critics understand? To Obama, people giving up on work IS good news. We're getting closer to the day where a majority of Americans depend on the federal government for their very livelihoods.
This is what Obama wants. This is what
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Read more... [Good or Bad Economy, for Obama It's a Win-Win]
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Daily Dose of Reason -
Politics & Government
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Written by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.
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Tuesday, 07 February 2012 00:00 |
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Senator Jim DeMint of South Carolina says: “I can guarantee you in the Super Bowl this year the two coaches are not telling their teams to go out and work with the other guys because the other team has an opposite goal. In politics —unfortunately now in Washington — the Democrats’ goal is completely opposite of what the American goal really should be.”
This is exactly the right attitude. But it contradicts more than the establishment politics of Washington D.C. It contradicts the prevailing philosophical view that, "There is no right or wrong. There is no objective truth."
Ironically, it's Republicans -- or libertarians, or Objectivists, or Tea Partiers, or anyone who opposes the establishment position and interests of Big Government -- who face the burden of proving that facts are facts and that reality is objective. Liberals, socialists and Obama Democrats face no such burden. This is because
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Read more... [A Divided America? If Only!]
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Daily Dose of Reason -
Politics & Government
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Written by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.
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Monday, 06 February 2012 00:00 |
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National Journal online reports: "According to the Congressional Budget Office, which released its new Budget and Economic Outlook report [last week], a 10-year repeal of the growth-rate formula that froze doctors' rates [for Medicare reimbursement] at current levels would cost $316 billion, compared with $290 billion when CBO last calculated the rate in November. The difference may make permanent repeal of the formula -- always a long shot -- even less palatable to lawmakers. But even with the doc fix on hold, the report projects that spending on health care programs will explode in the coming decade. Assuming that doctors get the [27 percent] pay cut that Congress typically erases, Medicare gross spending is still expected to grow by 90 percent by 2022. The report cites the program's growth, as more Baby Boomers retire."
People keep telling me, "Medicare is a popular program. How do you tell people that Medicare is a problem? People like it."
Well, of course they like it.
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Read more... [The Grand Illusion of Medicare]
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Daily Dose of Reason -
Politics & Government
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Written by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.
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Sunday, 05 February 2012 00:00 |
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Associated Press reports: "Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard began military exercises Saturday in the country's south, the latest show of force after threats to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for tougher Western sanctions. The latest military maneuvers got under way following stern warnings by Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, about any possible U.S. or Israeli attacks against Tehran's nuclear facilities. It also comes after Western forces boosted their naval presence in the Gulf led by the American aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln."
This is the result of a foreign policy which amounts to 3 principles, conveyed repeatedly by the United States to the government of Iran: (1) "Please like us"; (2) "We have to do these sanctions, but really, you're our friend"; and (3) "We know our country is a big racist imperialist and we apologize for that."
In order to understand the actions of Iran, you have to
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Read more... [Making Peace With Bullies Never Ends Well]
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Daily Dose of Reason -
Politics & Government
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Written by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D.
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Sunday, 29 January 2012 00:00 |
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A flat income tax -- say, 15 percent for all Americans -- is a brilliant idea. Right?
No way. The flat tax proposal, in the economy as we know it, evades two very, very important facts. No proposal which evades relevant facts can -- or should -- win.
First of all, according to all the numbers available, half of Americans
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Read more... [The 46 Percent]
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