The Economist Who Says Schools Are Safer Than You Think
When the feds failed to track COVID-19, Emily Oster stepped in.
When the feds failed to track COVID-19, Emily Oster stepped in.
Aren't there more important things to do right now?
Good Democratic voters don't like being called racist Trump supporters, which unions are leveraging to keep schools closed.
Teachers unions in Chicago and elsewhere are militantly defying requests to reopen.
The rules should not just apply to the little people.
American companies would need relief from Democrats’ COVID relief efforts.
Black education activist Chris Stewart is done with liberal falsehoods and conservative failure to deliver reform.
Instead of allowing people with chronic medical conditions to get a higher place in line, a pivotal Oregon committee leans into racial justice considerations.
The governor's order had banned outdoor dining and forbade Californians from socializing with members outside their household.
At a time when supply is constrained and time is of the essence, medical providers in many states are throwing precious doses away.
District officials described the act of defiance as an illegal strike.
Making it easier for families to fund their preferred education options will be a lot more effective than throwing a big bribe to teachers unions.
Plus: Commemorating the first U.S. sex worker protest, why Parler is a success story for Section 230, and more...
Remote learning continues to be the norm for more than three out of four New York City public school students.
The case was filed directly in the Supreme Court under its "original jurisdiction" over cases filed by one state against another. It could have important implications for the future of federalism.
"She was charged with violating the Reopening Ontario Act."
If the aim is to reduce COVID-19 deaths, Oregon's plan is a failure.
Even as the district struggles to vaccinate seniors, it will soon allow half the city to get in line.
The president’s bill will create massive disincentives to work and leave future generations with massive levels of government intrusion and debt.
Biden's willingness to extend a nationwide eviction moratorium, while declining to mandate masks nationwide, demonstrates a worrying inconsistency in his views on presidential powers.
Biden correctly recognizes he doesn't have the authority to impose a general national mask mandate. The same reasoning shows the nationwide eviction ban is also illegal.
A politicized vaccine distribution process intended to take price out of the picture has given the edge to the rich, connected, and powerful.
The president acknowledges that there are limits to executive power, even during a public health emergency.
A comparison of Texas and California suggests that legal edicts matter less than The New York Times thinks.
He's laid out a five-point plan to speed up getting COVID-19 vaccinations to more Americans.
"Let's do the thing, which saves the most lives," says economist Alex Tabarrok: Instead of holding back second doses, use them all right away.
Eviction bans were enacted as an emergency public health measure. They’re quickly becoming a permanent policy.
Using obscure laws to prevent people from helping each other is obscene.
A politician socially distances from his own executive orders.
On the brighter side, Biden wants 100 million vaccinations in 100 days and will push for immediate school reopenings.
Now officials in Chicago and New York are reconsidering their rules.
Recent upward trends in cases and deaths seem to reflect virus transmission tied to holiday gatherings.
Garden State lawmakers have unanimously passed two bills now allowing restaurants to keep their outdoor operations running so long as their indoor dining rooms are restricted.
“Keep the schools open,” said Anthony Fauci.
Vaccine booster doses currently being reserved will be released immediately to inoculate more Americans.
His original guidance forced hospitals to throw away vaccine doses. That still might happen.
More than 4,100 people died of COVID-19 yesterday across the country, but some New York medical providers are dumping vaccines instead of putting them in people's arms.
He will count on future production to provide second doses.
Small business owners and sheriffs are leading the revolt against Governor Gavin Newsom's stay-at-home orders, which they say are unscientific and ineffective.
Open the schools, accelerate vaccine distribution, and stop being so generous with other people’s money.
The legislation gives the government wide latitude to detain those who might have a contagious disease.
The factory fire was salt in the wound of this struggling iconic New York business.
Plus: Gov. Andrew Cuomo demonstrates how not to handle vaccine distribution , Americans are fleeing big cities and high tax states, and more...
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