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How much will Obamacare -- call it the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act if you like -- cost over the next 10 years? More than you've been led to believe, reports Charles Blahous of George Mason University's Mercatus Center.
The belief that health insurance and the increased use of primary care associated with it leads to fewer hospitalizations has played an important role in the recent health care reform debate.
When we empower bureaucrats to make huge personal decisions for us, it becomes impossible to avoid trampling on liberty.
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius says the Obama administration will have zero tolerance for health insurers that say they are raising premiums because of increased costs imposed by ObamaCare; such a threat is thuggery.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released a study suggesting that rates of sexual violence in the United States are comparable to those in the war-stricken Congo. How is that possible?
Despite President Obama's oft-repeated promise that people would be able to keep their health insurance, the actual implementation of ObamaCare makes clear that people will lose their plans and Washington bureaucrats will be making core decisions about medical care.
One basic principle of the rule of law is that laws apply to everybody. If the sign says "No Parking," you're not supposed to park there even if you're a pal of the alderman. The Obamacare waiver process appears to violate this rule.
Does the United States really have a sexual violence rate that is comparable to the Congo? In a Washington Post piece, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) resident scholar Christina Hoff Sommers explains how a recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study is fundamentally flawed, and an example of careless advocacy research with bad consequences





