Commentary
Commentary
Business Policy CMS Shouldn’t Expand Its Broken Competitive Bidding Model
Durable medical equipment (DME) such as CPAP machines and hospital beds helps keep many patients out of expensive nursing home care and in their own homes. Unfortunately, creating the right payment model has long eluded the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Disconcertingly, they now plan to expand a ...
Wayne H Winegarden
September 12, 2025
Commentary
Valley residents are growing alarmed by solar-and-battery project taking over farmland. Here’s why.
We’ve been assured for quite some time that wind and solar are the energy sources of the future. If so, their development needs to be accelerated because they are not being well received by locals. Their low energy density is partly, if not largely, to blame. Fresno County residents are ...
Kerry Jackson
September 8, 2025
Commentary
California’s lawsuit against energy companies will increase greenhouse gas emissions
This fall the San Francisco Superior Court is holding a hearing on California’s lawsuit against American energy companies. The lawsuit alleges that these private U.S. companies misled the public about greenhouse gases’ impact and are responsible for covering the costs associated with climate disasters. But California and the federal government ...
Wayne H Winegarden
September 8, 2025
Commentary
Trump’s Medicaid reform is moral and necessary
Among the most contentious provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4, are its Medicaid work requirements. Starting in 2027, able-bodied, working-age Medicaid beneficiaries enrolled through Obamacare’s expansion of the program must spend at least 80 hours a month on ...
Sally C. Pipes
September 8, 2025
Commentary
Thanks to Obamacare, Insurance Fraud Irresistible
Something strange is afoot on the Obamacare exchanges. According to a new study by the Paragon Health Institute, an astounding number of patients with premium-free exchange plans filed no claims whatsoever last year. It’s possible that none of these individuals required medical care in 2024. Read the op-ed here.
Sally C. Pipes
September 5, 2025
Commentary
It’s Time To Let The Electric Vehicle Industry Grow Up
The U.S. has been subsidizing electric vehicles (EVs) since 2009 and hybrid vehicles for even longer. Recent Congressional actions have substantially changed this policy. As part of the reconciliation package, Congress rolled back the $7,500 federal EV tax credit ($4,000 credit for used EVs) as well as the EV battery ...
Wayne H Winegarden
September 2, 2025
Commentary
Time To Crack Down On The Knock-Off Weight-Loss Drug Trade
Wegovy, Zepbound, and other GLP-1 agonists have given Americans an extraordinary new tool for losing weight and improving their health. But they’ve also given rise to a dangerous new public health threat—counterfeit medicines. In a rush to capitalize on the popularity of these drugs, a number of third-party telehealth firms ...
Sally C. Pipes
September 2, 2025
Commentary
Should the Government Control Drug Prices? No…
In a May 12 executive order, President Trump announced a “most favored nation” policy that intends to lower prescription drug prices. Among other things, the order directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services to “communicate most-favored-nation price targets to pharmaceutical manufacturers to bring prices . . . in line ...
Sally C. Pipes
September 2, 2025
Commentary
Trump Embraces Disastrous Most Favored Nation Drug Pricing
President Donald Trump gave American drug companies an ultimatum last month. Either they agree to adopt foreign-style price controls, or the administration “will deploy every tool in [its] arsenal” to do it for them. More specifically, the president asked drug firms to base U.S. drug prices for a given drug ...
Sally C. Pipes
August 29, 2025
Business & Economics
Using The Government To Crush Competitors Harms Fans And The Economy
Cronyism and industrial policy are thriving to the detriment of our economic vibrancy. Consider that between 1960 and 2007 – right before the Great Recession – the economy expanded by more than 3% annually. Recessions happened, of course, but the economy always recovered the lost ground. Read the op-ed here.
Wayne H Winegarden
August 29, 2025
Business Policy CMS Shouldn’t Expand Its Broken Competitive Bidding Model
Durable medical equipment (DME) such as CPAP machines and hospital beds helps keep many patients out of expensive nursing home care and in their own homes. Unfortunately, creating the right payment model has long eluded the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Disconcertingly, they now plan to expand a ...
Valley residents are growing alarmed by solar-and-battery project taking over farmland. Here’s why.
We’ve been assured for quite some time that wind and solar are the energy sources of the future. If so, their development needs to be accelerated because they are not being well received by locals. Their low energy density is partly, if not largely, to blame. Fresno County residents are ...
California’s lawsuit against energy companies will increase greenhouse gas emissions
This fall the San Francisco Superior Court is holding a hearing on California’s lawsuit against American energy companies. The lawsuit alleges that these private U.S. companies misled the public about greenhouse gases’ impact and are responsible for covering the costs associated with climate disasters. But California and the federal government ...
Trump’s Medicaid reform is moral and necessary
Among the most contentious provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4, are its Medicaid work requirements. Starting in 2027, able-bodied, working-age Medicaid beneficiaries enrolled through Obamacare’s expansion of the program must spend at least 80 hours a month on ...
Thanks to Obamacare, Insurance Fraud Irresistible
Something strange is afoot on the Obamacare exchanges. According to a new study by the Paragon Health Institute, an astounding number of patients with premium-free exchange plans filed no claims whatsoever last year. It’s possible that none of these individuals required medical care in 2024. Read the op-ed here.
It’s Time To Let The Electric Vehicle Industry Grow Up
The U.S. has been subsidizing electric vehicles (EVs) since 2009 and hybrid vehicles for even longer. Recent Congressional actions have substantially changed this policy. As part of the reconciliation package, Congress rolled back the $7,500 federal EV tax credit ($4,000 credit for used EVs) as well as the EV battery ...
Time To Crack Down On The Knock-Off Weight-Loss Drug Trade
Wegovy, Zepbound, and other GLP-1 agonists have given Americans an extraordinary new tool for losing weight and improving their health. But they’ve also given rise to a dangerous new public health threat—counterfeit medicines. In a rush to capitalize on the popularity of these drugs, a number of third-party telehealth firms ...
Should the Government Control Drug Prices? No…
In a May 12 executive order, President Trump announced a “most favored nation” policy that intends to lower prescription drug prices. Among other things, the order directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services to “communicate most-favored-nation price targets to pharmaceutical manufacturers to bring prices . . . in line ...
Trump Embraces Disastrous Most Favored Nation Drug Pricing
President Donald Trump gave American drug companies an ultimatum last month. Either they agree to adopt foreign-style price controls, or the administration “will deploy every tool in [its] arsenal” to do it for them. More specifically, the president asked drug firms to base U.S. drug prices for a given drug ...
Using The Government To Crush Competitors Harms Fans And The Economy
Cronyism and industrial policy are thriving to the detriment of our economic vibrancy. Consider that between 1960 and 2007 – right before the Great Recession – the economy expanded by more than 3% annually. Recessions happened, of course, but the economy always recovered the lost ground. Read the op-ed here.