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Congress has introduced several bills on net neutrality, but mostof themare likely to do more harm than good.
So men and women who faced death at Fallujah or Kandahar or Desert Storm are now to face death panels at home? That’s the upshot of the administration’s plans for military health care.
A group of leading economists provide their stance on U.S. broadband policy.
Iraq should begin considering what it will do if Iraqi President Jalal Talabani dies. If they start considerations now, the transition of power will be much smoother.
The text from Roger Noriega's "Is There a Chávez Terror Network on America's Doorstep?" has been translated in Spanish.
The United States will spend $1.8 trillion--over 15 percent of GDP--on health care this year. Despite that enormous expenditure, doctors remain trapped in an inefficient system that too often impedes the flow of clinical information necessary for sound treatment decisions. Patients have little information about the quality of their care,...
Regulators and policymakers are struggling to keep up with rapid changes in the telecommunications industry. Policies toward telecommunications can dramatically affect innovation, consumers, and overall economic growth. This conference will address two key issues: first, whether regulations should guarantee what advocates call “net-neutrality,” which would restrict how Internet...
Almost nine years have passed since the Telecommunications Act of 1996—the first major congressional overhaul of telecommunications law in almost sixty-two years. The provisions concerning competition for local telephone services have been especially controversial and have prompted much litigation. Given the likelihood that Congress will revisit telecommunications legislation in 2005,...




