Science & Technology
Science & Technology
Government to Patients: “We Feel Pain Is Best for You”
Ari Armstrong August 27, 2014
Individuals’ lives and bodies belong to them, not to the government. Individuals have a moral right to seek out and use the drugs of their choice for pain management (and for any other purpose), and politicians and bureaucrats are morally wrong—indeed, they are detestable—when they violate those rights.
Science & Technology
European Industry Stagnates as Americans Prosper with Fracking
David Biederman August 8, 2014
The cause of this problem for the EU is not the shale gas revolution in the United States; rather, the cause of the problem is the lack of such a revolution in Europe—and the cause of that problem is European policies that stifle energy production.
Science & Technology
The Environmentalists’ War on People
Ari Armstrong August 4, 2014
Although environmentalists sometimes couch their policies in terms of improving the world for human benefit, fundamentally the environmentalist movement regards humankind as a blight on the earth whose productive activities are inherently immoral. Most recently, the Guardian reports a “plan to engineer a shorter, smaller human race to cope with climate change.”
Science & Technology
What Congress Should Do Rather than Sue
Ari Armstrong August 1, 2014
Unfortunately, this week’s response by House Republicans—to sue Obama—demonstrates that they are more interested in poking the President than in defunding and ultimately repealing the rights-violating laws that are throttling the ability of doctors, insurers, and patients to act according to their reasoned judgment.
Science & Technology
ObamaCare, Nonobjective Law, and Brothers’ Keepers
Ari Armstrong July 24, 2014
That ObamaCare pervasively violates the rights of individuals to control their own wealth and to freely negotiate terms of health insurance and health care on a free market is bad enough; that ObamaCare does so via ambiguous, nonobjective statutes is even worse. ObamaCare substantially empowers the executive branch and hordes of bureaucrats to create whatever health policies they wish.
Science & Technology
Contra Senator Udall, America Needs a “Not the Government’s Business Act”
Ari Armstrong July 21, 2014
Recently Udall announced he was sponsoring the so-called “Not My Boss’s Business Act” to overturn the Supreme Court’s recent Hobby Lobby decision and again force businesses to provide employees with health insurance covering the full spectrum of birth control mandated by ObamaCare.
Science & Technology
The Real Costs of the Government’s “Net Zero Energy” House
Ari Armstrong July 14, 2014
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has built a beautiful and technologically innovative house—at taxpayers’ expense. Although the technology in the house appears to work well—as NIST boasted in a recent media release—government should not have built the house, and the house is not economical to operate.
Science & Technology
Teen Drives Research of Her Own Disease
Varun Parameswaran July 6, 2014
In 2008, twelve-year-old Elana Simon was diagnosed with fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, a rare and deadly form of liver cancer found in some 200 patients each year. A few years later, after doing research for a high school internship, then sixteen-year-old Simon proposed a study to isolate the genetic mutation responsible for her disease.
Science & Technology
Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby Decision: Good Outcome, Mixed Reasoning
Ari Armstrong July 1, 2014
The Supreme Court delivered an important but substantially mitigated victory to advocates of individual rights by throwing out the ObamaCare requirement that business owners pay for health insurance when doing so violates their religious convictions. At issue was whether the federal government could force businesses to provide health insurance that covers forms of birth control.
Science & Technology
Lifelike Androids are Improving People’s Lives Today
Anoop Verma June 29, 2014
Although androids often get a bad rap in science-fiction movies and video games, real-life androids are already improving people’s lives—and making “careers” of it. Tokyo’s National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation has actually “hired” two lifelike androids: Kodomoroid will read the latest news from the Internet, and Otonaroid will converse with visitors about science and technology.