Wading through Mississippi’s morass of regulations would take 13 weeks to absorb its 9.3 million words and 117,558 restrictions.
Reihan Salam, Executive Editor of National Review and the author of Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders, joined MCPP for our Liberty Luncheon on November 15.
Purchase his book here: https://www.amazon.com/Melting-Pot-Civil-War-Immigrants-ebook/dp/B06W599DSM/
Reihan's the author of the new book, Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders. Listen to his take on what we should do as a nation to solve our immigration crisis.
You can purchase the book here.
In this edition of Freedom Minute, we talk about why food truck regulations are not only bad for consumers and the local economy, they are often indefensible from a legal perspective.
In this edition of Freedom Minute, we talk about recent comments on Twitter from a professor at Ole Miss and how we can reform higher education.
In this edition of Freedom Minute, we talk about why a government boycott based upon a personal objection to speech made by a company is unconstitutional.
In this edition of Freedom Minute, we talk about the start of the NFL season, declining ratings and revenue, Nike, Colin Kaepernick, and culture.
In this edition of Freedom In Five Minutes or Less, we talk about the new school LeBron James is opening, innovation in education, and why sending piles of cash to district schools usually does not work.
Gov. Phil Bryant has called a special session to begin this Thursday. Lawmakers will address infrastructure repairs and maintenance, along with the allocation of BP money, according to the governor's call.
“We will be able to add roughly $200 million into roads and bridges in the state of Mississippi,” said Gov. Bryant. “It will start the first year of 2019 and go into $260 million that will grow after that, so you will eventually reach the $300 million, but in the first three years of this plan, we have put over $600 million into roads and bridges in the state of Mississippi without raising taxes.”
Where will the money come from? Dr. Jameson Taylor, Vice President for Policy at Mississippi Center for Public Policy, provides a preview of the special session.