Category: Project 21

You Don’t Need My Permission to be Successful, by Mike Ramey

New Visions Commentary /
Reprints permitted provided source is credited. A grade school teacher once told me bullies fight because they have a poor vocabulary. She said they express their anger with their fists - lashing out and hurting people - because they don't ...
READ MORE

Playing the Nasty Card, by Murdock “Doc” Gibbs

New Visions Commentary /
A New Visions Commentary paper published December 2000 by The National Center for Public Policy Research, 501 Capitol Ct., N.E., Washington, DC 20002, 202/543-4110, Fax 202-543-5975, E-Mail [email protected], Web http://www.nationalcenter.org. Reprints permitted provided source is credited. A grade school teacher ...
READ MORE

Economic Opportunity and Social Issues Trump Environment as Top Concern for Poor and Minorities, by John Carlisle

New Visions Commentary /
Reprints permitted provided source is credited. Environmental laws are unfair to minorities and the poor because, although they are least able to pay, they must bear the greatest costs for adhering to those laws through lost jobs and higher prices ...
READ MORE

Government Attack on Dietary Supplements Lean on Facts, by Council Nedd

New Visions Commentary /
Reprints permitted provided source is credited. I've never been surprised by the foolish actions of our federal government. Like all things, it follows the laws of nature - and nature abhors a vacuum. If left unchecked, our government behaves similarly, ...
READ MORE

So What Do We Do Now? by Kimberley Jane Wilson

New Visions Commentary /
Reprints permitted provided source is credited. Well, thank God that's all over. I'm talking about the presidential election. A one-day event turned into a month long farce that had the whole world laughing at America. Of course, being laughed at ...
READ MORE

This Will Hurt, by Kimberley Jane Wilson

New Visions Commentary /
A New Visions Commentary paper published November 2000 by The National Center for Public Policy Research, 501 Capitol Ct., N.E., Washington, DC 20002, 202/543-4110, Fax 202-543-5975, E-Mail [email protected], Web http://www.nationalcenter.org. Reprints permitted provided source is credited. I just finished reading ...
READ MORE

Digital Divide? What Digital Divide? by Deroy Murdock

New Visions Commentary /
A New Visions Commentary paper published November 2000 by The National Center for Public Policy Research, 501 Capitol Ct., N.E., Washington, DC 20002, 202/543-4110, Fax 202-543-5975, E-Mail [email protected], Web http://www.nationalcenter.org. Reprints permitted provided source is credited. The Reverend Jesse Jackson ...
READ MORE

Remember When Gore Liked Fuzzy Math? by Council Nedd

New Visions Commentary /
A New Visions Commentary paper published November 2000 by The National Center for Public Policy Research, 501 Capitol Ct., N.E., Washington, DC 20002, 202/543-4110, Fax 202-543-5975, E-Mail [email protected], Web http://www.nationalcenter.org. Reprints permitted provided source is credited. My, how times have ...
READ MORE

Playing Hide and Seek With Black Voters, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
Everyone played " hide and seek" as a child. For black voters, however, the game continues every election. This year was no exception. Democratic leaders and their black allies "hide" equal justice and civil rights issues in campaigns for black ...
READ MORE

Global Warming Rules Make This Black Man Hot Under the Collar, by John Meredith

New Visions Commentary /
Fear that the world is warming because of industrialization is a theory with no factual basis. What we really need to fear are the policies being pushed to stop it. These new regulations will hurt everyone, especially those struggling to ...
READ MORE
Loading...

The National Center for Public Policy Research is a communications and research foundation supportive of a strong national defense and dedicated to providing free market solutions to today’s public policy problems. We believe that the principles of a free market, individual liberty and personal responsibility provide the greatest hope for meeting the challenges facing America in the 21st century.