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No Cause for Alarm at Five-Year Mid-Point of the Armstrong-Gore Climate “Bet”
J. Scott ArmstrongIn 2007, University of Pennsylvania Professor J. Scott Armstrong’s attention was drawn to former VP Gore’s concerns about global warming. Having spent five decades studying the science of forecasting, Armstrong decided to examine the basis for the forecasts of global warming. He was unable to find a single scientific forecast ...
Larry Downes: The Privacy 'Crisis'
Jim LakelyAuthor and consultant Larry Downes discusses his latest paper, "A Rational Response to the Privacy ‘Crisis.’" ...
Germany Tells New York Fed: Give Us Our Gold
Robert WenzelGermany's central bank plans to bring back to Germany almost 700 tons of gold reserves it keeps in New York and Paris. By 2020, half of its gold bars will be in its vaults, the Deutsche Bundesbank said in its January 16 announcement. It currently keeps less than a third at home. The bars were originally taken out of ...
Global Warming Benefits Arctic Species, Peer-Reviewed Study Shows
James M. Taylor, J.D.Global warming will benefit most Arctic species, a team of scientists report in the peer-reviewed journal PLOS One . The scientists found global warming will allow most Arctic species to expand their ranges and no species are expected to go extinct. The study delivers a sharp blow to global warming activists who have been ...
Child Exploitation
Maureen MartinIt didn’t take long for trial lawyers to begin trying to profit from the Newtown massacre. A New Haven lawyer filed a $100 million claim against the state of Connecticut (which would be taken from taxpayers, of course), alleging the state failed to protect students at the Sandy Hook Elementary School. Residents were outraged ...
Daily Top Ten National Education News Roundup, Jan. 14 to 18
Joy PullmannFriday's ed news: 1. Parents have pulled another Parent Trigger , this time in Los Angeles. 2. Indianapolis' reactionary school superintendent retires . 3. Minnesota may be poised to adopt revisionist history standards . 4. Pennsylvania schools losing students to charters are spending money not on improving but on ads to get the ...
Issue #77: Alarmists Concede Defeat in Heartland/Climate Reality Debate
James M. Taylor, J.D.Global warming alarmists and skeptics alike report Heartland Institute Senior Fellow James M. Taylor scored a decisive victory over Ray Bellamy, an official presenter for Al Gore’s Climate Reality Project, in a global warming debate in Tallahassee, Florida. “A number of attendees had their viewpoint about climate change not being ...
Florida Gov. Rick Scott Wants Proof Renewable Energy Law Benefits Economy
James M. Taylor, J.D.Nearly a year has passed since the Florida legislature passed H.B. 7117, handing over $100 million in subsidies to the renewable energy industry, and Gov. Rick Scott is seeking proof the taxpayer dollars are actually benefiting Florida’s economy. Putnam Claims Economic Benefits In April 2013, Scott, a Republican, appeared poised ...
Florida Homeowners Associations Threaten Banks With Foreclosure
Nick BakerSince the housing crisis began five years ago, much of the focus has been on the hundreds of thousands of delinquent borrowers and the banks that have foreclosed on them. However, some banks are now seeing themselves threatened with foreclosures. The threats are coming from hundreds of homeowners and condo associations that ...
Families Pack Indiana Common Core Hearing
Joy PullmannHundreds of parents, grandparents, and children packed a January Indiana Senate hearing on a bill to remove the state from the Common Core, a national list detailing what K-12 students should know in every grade. State senators’ sentiments seemed mixed, but the audience leaned toward supporting Senate Bill 193. Approximately ...
Global Tropical Cyclone Activity of the Past Five Thousand Years
Craig IdsoSomething has orchestrated the ebbing and flowing of global TC activity over the last 5,000 years, but that something has most certainly not been changes in the atmosphere’s CO2 concentration... Read More Free-Air CO2-Enrichment May Not Be All It’s Cracked Up to Be (15 Jan 2013) A new study suggests that the long-used ...
Leaked IPCC Graph Shows Models Predicting Too Much Warming
Alyssa CarducciUnited Nations officials have repeatedly predicted more warming than has occurred in the real world, according to a leaked copy of a draft United Nations climate report. Warming Predictions in Doubt The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is preparing to issue its Fifth Assessment Report in 2013. An IPCC ...
Brian Balfour: States Looking to End Income Taxes
Steve StanekNorth Carolina . . . Nebraska . . . Louisiana . . . governors and top lawmakers in these and other states have recently announced their desire to roll back and even end personal and corporate income taxes. Brian Balfour of the Civitas Institute in North Carolina explains why this is happening now, and how such moves ...
The Leaflet - Meet Your Very Own Think Tank!
The Leaflet - John NothdurftOne of the great privileges I have in working for Heartland is the opportunity to help elected officials at all levels of government discover, develop, and promote free-market solutions to economic and social problems. Heartland realizes busy elected officials have little or no staff and need a reliable source of research ...
Van Lines Data Show People Fleeing States With Big Fiscal Problems
William BergmanCitizens and businesses are fleeing states with fiscal problems – that is one apparent message from the latest annual report from United Van Lines. The company’s study of 2012 interstate shipments, released in December, showed significant continuing flight from states with high state government debt loads as measured by the Institute ...
Connecticut Studies Job Impact of Incentives but Not Tax Increases
Zach JanowskiConnecticut officials emphasize the job impact of incentives given to companies, often referencing calculations done using economic modeling software to justify the deals, but they don’t apply the same scrutiny to tax changes such as the largest-in-state-history increase passed two years ago. Although state officials could use the ...
Marcellus and Utica Shales and Ohio Schools: A Possible Model for Economic Growth and Opportunity
Lisa Burleson, Sean Cooke Heartland InstituteIt’s a tale of two numbers: $2.9 billion and $9.6 billion. The first number, $2.9 billion, represents the reduction in education funding in the state budget for fiscal 2012-2013. The second number, $9.6 billion, represents the projected value of the annual oil and gas production in the State of Ohio by 2014 as a result of ...
Live Blog: Indiana Common Core Withdrawal Hearing Jan. 16
Joy PullmannToday at 1:30 p.m. ET, Indiana's Senate Education Committee will hear testimony on a bill to withdraw the state from the Common Core. The Common Core is a set of grade-by-grade requirements for what kids should know in math and English. Forty-five states have adopted it, and Indiana led in promoting and participating in it ...
Misguided PBS Program Gets the Facts Wrong on Acid Ocean Alarm
Steve GorehamOn December 5 the PBS NewsHour showed a segment titled “Endangered Coral Reefs Die as Ocean Temperatures Rise and Water Turns Acidic,” with Hari Sreenivasan reporting. The story discussed the recent loss of Florida coral reefs and the possible impact on recreation and tourism if reef degradation continues. But PBS wrongly told ...
Virginia’s Uranium Mining Moratorium Should Be Buried, But What About Property Rights?
Marc Scribner Competitive Enterprise InstituteThe earth below the United States contains 5 percent of the world’s known recoverable uranium deposits. More than a quarter of U.S. uranium is found in southern Virginia at Coles Hill near Chatham in Pittsylvania County. The two uranium deposits at Coles Hill are valued at $7 billion and together constitute the seventh largest ...