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The Environmental Protection Agency will celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the Clean Air Act, but the Clean Air Act cannot handle today's pollution problems and time to really celebrate will come when the Clean Air Act is itself reformed to make it capable of dealing with today's challenges.
The Environmental Protection Agency's Interstate Air Quality Rule would reduce power plant emissions, yetmedia stories claim that power plant pollution has been getting worse.
Reforming the Clean Air Act’s treatment of conventional pollutants would both ease political resolution of the greenhouse gas issue and improve control of conventional pollutants.
Polls continue to show that most Americans mistakenly believe air pollution has been worsening and that too little is being done to improve air quality.
New Source Review was never good for the environment, the economy, or individual liberty, but wonderful for those whose power and funding depend on a micromanaged, process-driven regulatory system.
Our constitutional order is becoming markedly less competitive--making government less responsive and leaving critical sectors of our society less dynamic and free. To understand the sources of this trend and its importance, we need first to understand the nature, advantages, and challenges of competition itself.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which is forcing Americans to spend billions of dollars per year to address ozone air quality, is actually making the situation worse.
Our relationship with Japan is indeed a cornerstone of the liberal international order that has marked the six decades since the end of the Second World War, and for that reason we should look forward to maintaining it for years to come.



