I’ve previously criticized George Mason economist Alex Tabarrok’s views on patents.1 For example, as noted in Patent Policy on the Back of a Napkin, Tabarrok makes a Laffer-curve style argument that patent rights are currently “too strong.” Of course, he is correct...
Featured Articles
Police Assault and Arrest 11 Year Old Autistic Boy For Poking Classmate With Pencil
by Matt Agorist | Mar 11, 2021 | Criminal Justice, Featured Articles
Utterly heart-breaking video was released this week as part of a federal lawsuit, accusing Douglas County school and sheriff’s officials of “aggressively” handcuffing a child with autism and locking him up after he poked a classmate with a pencil. The pencil poke was...
Iraq War II Reaches Maturity
by Dan Caldwell | Mar 11, 2021 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
This month, the Iraq war—in which I served as a U.S. Marine more than a decade ago—turns 18. As a result, soon there will likely be service members deploying to Iraq who were born after the war began in 2003. When they arrive, they will find the conflict remains a...
Congress Seeks to Block American Re-Entry to the Iran Deal
by Dave DeCamp | Mar 10, 2021 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy, Politics
A group of 140 bipartisan members of the House is urging President Biden to seek a more “comprehensive” agreement with Iran, which means the group of lawmakers opposes a revival of the original 2015 nuclear deal, known as the JCPOA. In a letter sent to Secretary of...
How Wind Power Froze Texas
by Robert Murphy | Mar 10, 2021 | Economics, Featured Articles
In the wake of February’s tragic power outages in Texas, during which 4.5 million households suffered service interruptions, partisans on both sides have been quick to interpret the events as confirmation of their preferred energy policies. With news images of...
Reflections on ‘The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich’
by Kym Robinson | Mar 9, 2021 | Book Reviews, Featured Articles
“Those who do not remember the past are condemned to relive it.”- Santayana There are some books you read which leave lasting scars on the mind. For me, that was The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer. Having first read it as a child when war was...
SWAT Destroys Innocent Woman’s Home, Sends Her the Bill
by Matt Agorist | Mar 9, 2021 | Criminal Justice, Featured Articles
In July of last year, Vicki Baker, 75, was excited to move on to the next chapter of her life in Montana by selling her home she owned for 12 years in McKinney, Texas. That sale would never take place on schedule, however, because the day before she was supposed to...
Reflections of a Political ‘Extremist’
by John deLaubenfels | Mar 8, 2021 | Featured Articles
It is popular in Congress nowadays to make endless sound-bytes decrying an alleged rise of dangerous "extremism" in America. But what I call living a peaceful, normal, moral life, those people define as "extremist," and since they're experts at everything, I must be...