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Sarbanes-Oxley Act is bad for investors and for the international competitiveness of American business and American capital markets.
The Paycheck Fairness Act looks like common sense, but instead of helping women it will hurt all workers. The legislation, built on 30 years of spurious advocacy research, will impose unnecessary and onerous requirements on employers.
In the lead-up to the one-year anniversary of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (better known as ObamaCare), the following American Enterprise Institute (AEI) health policy scholars are available to comment.
The authors of the November 2011 Heritage Foundation report “Assessing the Compensation of Public-School Teachers” respond to questions and concerns, in the process showing that certain critical accusations—such as undercounting teachers’ work hours or overestimating retirement benefits—are simply false.
Construction projects across the nation have been delayed because bureaucrats, activists, and politicians are not ready to hand them out.
The examples of rigidly enforced conformity could fill several volumes, and no amount of criticism from outside the environmental citadel is likely to break though the walls. So, is there any chance that reform will come from within?
With the shale boom radically altering the energy chessboard, panicked ideologues are resorting to a tired ploy: pitting natural gas against alternative sources as if generating energy is a zero-sum game.
The uncertainty characterizing President Obama's economic policy has been a key factor in suppressing the recovery, and a more overt war on business may be yet to come.






