Every day, in meetings at all levels of government, representatives of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), planning groups, and federal agents surround elected representatives and insist that their policies have nothing to do with international agendas. They regularly publish reports and rail against anyone even mentioning the names Agenda 21 or the new Agenda 2030. “No, no,…
Tom DeWeese
The Third American Revolution
More and more Americans are finally starting to realize we have a problem in this country. Most are not sure why or even what the problem is. They simply sense something is very wrong as the nation appears headed in the wrong direction. Before any kind of action is taken it’s vital that these questions be…
General, Tom DeWeese
Gross National Happiness and The Happy Planet Index!
As we begin to understand the economic and personal consequences of Agenda 21 and its control program called Sustainable Development, we begin to see a pattern of attacks on free enterprise; drives for lower energy consumption; and higher taxes. All are vital elements of our society. To remove any of these parts, history and basic…
General
School Districts Using New Way to Exceed State Revenue Limits
147 Districts Have Spent $138 Million Over “Caps” Since 2009 MADISON – Since 2009, 147 school districts have spent $138 million above state-imposed revenue limits without approval of referendum voters. This is the key finding of an analysis from the nonpartisan Wisconsin Tax?payers Alliance (WISTAX) released today in its biweekly Focus newsletter. Since passage of…
Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty
New WILL Study Compares The Efficiency of Milwaukee’s Public Schools
Independent, non-instrumentality charters are doing more with much less May 19, 2016 – Milwaukee, WI – Dr. Will Flanders and CJ Szafir at the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty (WILL) coauthored a new report, “Bang for the Buck,” that analyzes which public schools* in Milwaukee produce the best outcomes per tax dollars spent. By…
Marita Noon
Colorado Supreme Court embraces the rule of law, not the fear mongering of the anti-fossil-fuel movement
On Monday, May 2 the Colorado Supreme Court ruled on what the New York Times (NYT) called: “a lengthy battle for energy production.” The court’s unanimous decision to strike down two cities’ limits on fracking is a victory for oil-and-gas companies and a “disappointment” to anti-fossil-fuel activists. Several states, including Colorado’s neighbors, New Mexico and…