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prev 1 2 next (13 results) In Sickness and In Health (video)
Between 1965 and 1980, Medicares costs went up about 2,900 percent, Troy University professor Christopher T. Warden pointed out in an Accuracy in Academia seminar at the National Press Club on July 31. (read more) North to Alaska
Troy University professor Christopher T. Warden, the former editorial page editor of Investor's Business Daily, explains why gas prices are so high in a recent Accuracy in Academia meeting at the National Press Club. (read more) In Sickness and In Health
Critics in both the media and academia who point to exploding costs and denial of care as maladies afflicting the U. S. health care system are getting part of the story right. (read more) Red Sky at Morning
An argument could be made that this past presidential election was not so much a choice between a liberal and a conservative as much as what some authors might term a contest between feminine and masculine progressives. (read more) Straight Down the Middle
Accuracy in Academia lost a great friend with the passing of Troy University journalism professor Chris Warden, the author of AIA’s forthcoming textbook Voodoo Anyone? (read more) Voodoo Anyone? Vindicated
Listen to the often-prophetic comments of Professor Christopher T. Warden, author of Accuracy in Academia’s textbook Voodoo Anyone? How to Understand Economics Without Really Trying, in his last radio interview. (read more) CAPping Off Mortgage Myopia
The Center for American Progress (CAP), about which Time magazine recently said that there is “no other group in Washington with more influence at this moment in history,” weighed in on the mortgage crisis on March 16th. (read more) Health Care Reform Rerun
Old subsidies never die. They just get more expensive. (read more) Moon Over Medicare
As the Obama administration draws up plans for a new health care system, experts in the field have taken the opportunity to offer some tips learned through Medicare that may help current health care reform efforts. (read more) College Students as Pawns
It was surprising to hear the word “surplus” on Capitol Hill on April 7th, having grown accustomed to the usual news about deficits. But the Cato Institute pin-pointed one surplus that is, because of the mismanagement of government funding, harming the system. The surplus is in college graduates. (read more) prev 1 2 next |


