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There are some interesting pension developments in Argentina that shed some light on Social Security policy in the United States.
Hugo Chavez's decision to nationalize the telecommunications and electrical industrieswill takeVenezuela down a backward path.
While the mandate question holds great constitutional interest, the outcome won't greatly affect Obamacare's operation one way or the other. The Medicaid question, in contrast, is crucial.
The Labor Board's recent attack on Boeing poses a threat to state commerce, and 16 states have responded by filing a brief opposing the NLRB's effort. The states' opposition to such actions represents a welcome check on this ever-expanding scope of government power.
The theory that with better health care we would actually save money may sound great, but it would require a definite increase in government.
While Too Big to Fail rounds off some corners, the movie gets the basic story right: the crisis resulted from serious mistakes made by many people, especially on Wall Street and in government. But these people are not portrayed as evil; they just made mistakes.
If more politicians were faithful to the Constitution, the government would be restrained, but restraining government is "weird," "wacky," and "dangerous" to many liberals today.
As the case of Marco Rubio demonstrates, it seems that no matter whom the GOP includes, it is always the wrong kind of inclusiveness.





