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Here’s the problem: The president never defines what he means by “fair.” And this is for a simple reason: his definition is simply not recognizable to most Americans.
In a recent piece American Enterprise Institute President and economist Arthur Brooks tackles what might be the definitive political battle of our times: the case for free enterprise. Brooks explains why free enterprise matters to the United States because it allows Americans to pursue their dreams, earn their success and be rewarded for their hard work.
There is another reason, a transcendent reason, for which free enterprise matters most—and this is the case we all must be able to make today.
How out-of-pocket health spending added 10 million people to the ranks of the poor.
The real question is not whether millionaires should pay more than the middle class, but whether they should pay more than they do today? Raising millionaires' taxes may seem fair--they can obviously afford to pay more. But, this policy has significant economic costs.
In "Wealth & Justice: The Morality of Democratic Capitalism", AEI President Arthur C. Brooks and former White House official Peter Wehner explore America's system of democratic capitalism and find that the morality of capitalism depends on the cultural and social climate from which it emerges.
American democracy has always been based on the concept of property ownership. Now that the housing bubble has burst, Americans musr find new ways to accumulate wealth.
After years of war, oppression, and uncertainty, Iraqi Kurds have reason for optimism. The Kurdistan Regional Government has sold international companies rights for exploitation and development of the region's petroleum resources.








