By denying access to the Manendo report, lawmakers and their serial enablers in the Legislative Counsel Bureau offer a reckless one-finger salute to the concepts of government transparency.
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The state’s housing crisis is the result of a regulatory state on steroids. If you won’t allow anyone to build new homes, the prices of existing dwellings will go up.
The Better Deal is full of vague and abstract concepts involving jobs, anti-trust enforcement and drug prices. And the recipe Democrats offer is clear: Government is the answer to the country’s problems.
Four percent growth remains an optimistic projection. But the president is at least making progress.
If it’s all about the “science,” the tobacco prohibitionists no longer deserve to carry the day.
On what grounds does the state pick and choose which law-abiding citizens are granted the privileges enshrined in the Constitution?
It will be hard to take Sen. Heller seriously the next time he pontificates about the importance of market-oriented health care reform or the need to address entitlement spending.
Despite the state judiciary’s frustrating indifference to enforcing the state’s separation of powers clause, it remains an important concept worth fighting for.
Ensuring that new bureaucratic edicts make sense from a cost-benefit perspective — while unshackling U.S. businesses and entrepreneurs from the chains of federal overreach — is just common sense.
The Journal attributed the decline to “state restrictions on litigation, the increasing cost of bringing suits, improved auto safety and a long campaign by businesses to turn public opinion against plaintiffs and their lawyers.”