The Coronavirus crisis shows that Minnesota must lift its hospital moratorium
Minnesota's hospital moratorium, which blocks the expansion of hospital beds in the state, serves no useful purpose and harms Minnesotans. It should go.
Minnesota's hospital moratorium, which blocks the expansion of hospital beds in the state, serves no useful purpose and harms Minnesotans. It should go.
Earlier this week, American Experiment wrote about how some Democratic members of the U.S. House and Senate had opposed the proposed pandemic relief spending bill because did not include more…
In the case of N95 masks, regulations which are supposed to safeguard public health turn out to be obstacles in a public health crisis.
The government is putting large swathes of the economy into 'sleep mode' to fight the Coronavirus. Here is what we need to do to make sure there is an economy…
The economic cost of Minnesota's war against the coronavirus may be one we need to pay, but it is already very high indeed.
The coronavirus crisis shows that regulations ostensibly intended to safeguard public health turn out, when a genuine public health crisis hits, to be positively harmful to public health.
This weekend, a $1.6 trillion spending planned aimed at reducing the economic strain Americans will feel due to the COVID-19 Coronavirus failed to pass out of the Senate because it…
As the coronavirus crisis shows, 'low-skilled' and 'important' are not mutually exclusive terms.
Last year, President Trump mocked the unreliability of wind power at the Conservative Political Action Conference stating, “Darling, is the wind blowing today? I’d like to watch television.” While the…
The coronavirus is making very plain the costs as well as the benefits of our regulatory apparatus
Across the United States, policymakers tackling the coronavirus are junking regulations which are getting in their way - regulations which are supposed to safeguard 'public health'.
Coronavirus is a human tragedy. It illustrates, once again, the need for a strong economy to provide the resources to cope.
But has that made the average American any better off?