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H.R. 10 requires Congress to vote on the rules which unelected agency officials issue under vague mandates from Congress. This is the right way to find out which regulations the voters desire.
Armed with better data, the theory goes, students and parents will vote with their wallets, putting pressure on low-performing colleges to improve while avoiding direct government intervention. But these provisions are not working nearly as well as intended.
The temptation on Capitol Hill is for Republicans to just crow briefly that "we told you so," issue a few press releases, hold a hearing or two, and then wait for another low-hanging rotten fruit of ObamaCare to fall off the tree through the forces of economic and political gravity. They should instead think more strategically about this opportunity.
Arizona's remarkably progressive involuntary treatment laws might have allowed Loughner's school to act. They permit involuntary evaluation and treatment of a person who desperately needs it.
Sally Satel, M.D., writes that in the wake of the Arizona shooting, now is the time to mandate the reporting of mental health concerns to help prevent future tragic incidents.
With the collapse of cap-and-trade in Congress, it is no longer possible to avoid the inconvenient truth that serious carbon constraints are a non-starter.
Policies designed to protect workers reduce the incentive to become better-educated.
Two cases likely to be decided this month by the Supreme Court could result in significant changes in our civil rights laws.





