Journalists’ Ethics and a Probable Prank

Nearly every profession has a written code of ethics. These codes are crafted to guide work and relations with readers, customers, and the general public. The codes stress honesty and integrity. They tell the public what principles and standards to expect, and they influence the professionals’ behavior by stating their ideals. The Society of Professional […]

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Charles Murray’s Lesson for America

I’ve known Charles Murray for some twenty years. A Senior Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, Charles is one of America’s most productive and compassionate scholars.  I’ve hosted him in Montana and reviewed four of his books. I greatly admire his courage and intellect and believe he deserves great respect, especially at colleges and universities. […]

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 Should Public Service Commissions Set Hospital Prices

Should Public Service Commissions Set Hospital Prices

Forward by John Baden I am pleased to post Montana Public Service Commissioner Roger Koopman’s excellent column as a FREE Insight. He discusses the proposal to have PSCs assigned responsibility for controlling hospital costs (Montana House Bill 395). The proposal to do this might be well intended but it surely is a remarkably naive and […]

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Today’s Political Economy of Federal Lands

The federal government owns over one quarter of America’s land, some 28%. West of the Mississippi the proportion increases to roughly one half. In Utah it’s 70%, Nevada 85%, and California over 45%. In marked contrast federal holdings in Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa average one percent. That’s 1.0%. Why the difference? Mainly because the land […]

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Paradigm Lost

There are two overlapping fields of environmental policy, sludge and romance.  Most Americans elect to live in large metro areas, places where controlling sludge is essential.  They pay little heed to the management of our federal and state romance lands; wildlife habitat, parks, wilderness, and range.   The majority prefers Manhattan, NY (population 1.6 million) to […]

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Thanksgiving Blessings

Thanksgiving is America’s original and most traditional holiday. The one we just celebrated brought special blessings. I have renewed appreciation for living in a community where trust is the norm. Achieving trust is difficult, especially in a nation as culturally, religiously and ethnically complex as ours. Most opinion leaders celebrate diversity in everything but thinking: […]

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 One Bumper Sticker and the Convulsions of our Aspiring Nation

One Bumper Sticker and the Convulsions of our Aspiring Nation

FREE’s mission, and my vocation, is to foster the conjunction of responsible liberty, sustainable ecology, and modest prosperity.  In the policy arena this implies reliance upon the rule of law, strong and clear property rights, economic coordination via the market process not governments, and laws and regulations that preclude predation of the weak by the […]

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