Colleen Hroncich
Like many education entrepreneurs, Nicolette Siebert is a mom who was a classroom teacher before she created her own learning community. Her son started out attending a homeschool co‐op, but it was a long drive from
Brent Skorup
The Federal Communications Commission today voted to reinstate Title II regulations for the Internet, needlessly extending the so‐called net neutrality controversy into its third decade and opening the agency up to legal
Colin Grabow
Earlier this month Sen. Marco Rubio (R‑Florida) took to X (formerly Twitter) to address criticisms—including from me—of recent opinion pieces he penned calling for the expanded use of industrial policy. I’m normally
Marc Joffe
Like mom and apple pie, the public library seems so intrinsically good that it should be beyond criticism. But like any institution that consumes millions of tax dollars, public libraries should not
Romina Boccia and Dominik Lett
Congress recently approved a $95 billion foreign aid package to send aid to Ukraine, Israel, and the Indo‐Pacific region. Including this new “one‐time” emergency spending in fiscal projections distorts