Better Than Charity By John Stossel
Many of us will give money to charity this month. Americans give more than any other people in the world.
Many of us will give money to charity this month. Americans give more than any other people in the world.
I'm thankful.
Yes, we've got the pandemic, lockdowns, a worsening deficit, etc.
But we still live in a relatively free country at the most prosperous time in human history.
I hear that climate change will destroy much of the world.
Yale University has fancy dining halls. They pay no property tax.
Local restaurants struggle to compete, but their tax burden makes that hard.
Worried about Tuesday?
Remember: The most important parts of life happen outside politics.
Donald Trump will probably lose the election.
As I write, The Economist says he has only an 8% chance of winning.
When COVID-19 hit, I quarantined in Eastern Massachusetts.
Biking around the woods, I noticed something strange.
Recently, I released a video that called California's fires "government fueled."
"A pioneer devoted to equality."
That was The Washington Post's headline about Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
"Mother Earth is angry!" says Nancy Pelosi in my newest video.
"The debate is over around climate change!" says California Governor Gavin Newsom, smirking, strangely.
Politicians shut down businesses because of COVID-19.
The media obsess about Trump/Biden, but another candidate will be on every state ballot: Libertarian Party nominee Jo Jorgensen.
Last week, I tallied Joe Biden's spending plans. This week, President Trump's.
Which presidential candidate will bankrupt America first, Donald Trump or Joe Biden?
Black Lives Matter protests led many people to want to do something useful to reduce racial injustice. Racial justice groups are being flooded with money.
Big companies made multimillion-dollar donations.
This week, American astronauts returned to earth. Their trip to the space station was the first manned launch from the U.S. in 10 years.
I laughed when I saw The Washington Post headline: "Minneapolis had progressive policies, but its economy still left black families behind."
Between 2 million and 3 million Americans will die!
That was the prediction from "experts" at London's Imperial College when COVID-19 began. They did also say if there was "social distancing of the whole population," the death toll could be cut in half, but 1.1 million to 1.46 million Americans would still die by this summer.