Understanding the Constitution: the 14th Amendment: Part I
- November 15, 2021
In 1992, Colorado voters adopted the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights (TABOR) to limit the growth in state and local spending. Over the past three decades, however, politicians from both parties and a complicit judicial branch have exempted more and more state spending from the TABOR limit. When voters adopted TABOR, 67% of state spending was
READ MOREThe record shows that the Constitution’s meaning of “natural born” is complicated, but clear-cut
READ MOREThe early supply-side sugar high induced by a raft of clean energy-related subsidies is starting to show signs of wearing off. From electric vehicle makers to offshore wind developers, producers spurred along by the Biden administration’s ambitious green energy goals and lavish tax incentives have suddenly been forced to confront pesky market forces that have started to cool
READ MORESixty years of political experience have taught me that secular leftists, unlike most traditional conservatives and liberals, often do not play by the rules.
READ MOREJFK was, in some ways, the author of the currently overgrown and dysfunctional federal bureaucracy.
READ MOREColorado’s environmental watchdogs are back with their latest report on the state’s progress in boosting recycling, and the results are about what you would expect. The Colorado Public Interest Research Group (CoPIRG), the state chapter of the Ralph Nader-founded liberal advocacy organization, released the 2023 edition of its “State of Recycling and Composting in Colorado”
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