STOSSEL: More government won’t make us happy
The right to pursue happiness has been perverted into a government-backed entitlement to happiness.
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The right to pursue happiness has been perverted into a government-backed entitlement to happiness.
Facts are facts and the laws of physics cannot be repealed.
If socialism wasn’t good, we argued lamely, then wealth at least was bad—or not as fair or as kind as government could make it.
The only way to enforce the law if a public official ignores a public access counselor’s opinion in your favor is to sue.
Those 76 million baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 are flooding onto the rolls at a rate of 10,000 each day.
Could there be new collusion in the appraisal network?
Under these definitions, some of our most-honored citizens could be considered mentally ill.
Local money spent downtown is not new money. It is merely money not spent somewhere else in the local economy.
Some of the people who played a pivotal role in shaping this debate are also running for public office.
If lunch together is good, living together would be even better.
Maybe leaders of the Republican National Committee see Indiana as a model.
It concerns me that we may be building outdated technology.
Commercial Real Estate Focus sections include statistical snapshots of Indianapolis' multi-tenant office vacancy rates and the local industrial market.
Increase in federal funding helps developers finance projects that include mixed-income rental housing.
Richard Lugar's tea party challenger stood Wednesday morning outside the Indianapolis home the Republican U.S. senator sold decades ago to make the case his opponent no longer has much to do with the state he represents.
The trick is to determine in advance just how expensive and lengthy that cleanup might be.
Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels says he hopes legislators will send him a statewide smoking ban bill with a short list of exemptions.
The Michael Jackson tribute show comes to his home state.
The Indiana State Fair Commission announced Wednesday that additional money from the State Fair Relief Fund has been distributed to victims of the stage-collapse tragedy. The commission said an additional $114,301 from the charity fund went to the victims of the Aug. 13 disaster in a third round of payments. So far, about $1.1 million has been contributed to the fund. Estates of the seven deceased victims have so far received a total of $68,241 each from the fund and injured claimants have each received payments of between $6,525 and $48,796. The fund is accepting donations until Oct. 31.