As the United States Senate Finance Committee convenes today for a meeting entitled "The Rising Cost…
CFIF on X CFIF on YouTube
As Senate Finance Committee Convenes on Healthcare Costs, First Do No Harm

As the United States Senate Finance Committee convenes today for a meeting entitled "The Rising Cost of Health Care:  Considering Meaningful Solutions for All Americans," the enduring adage of medical care applies:  Do no harm.

Specifically, as we've detailed at CFIF, we must especially avoid potentially catastrophic ideas like drug price controls (whether through so-called "Most Favored Nation" (MFN) programs or any other) and violations of patent and intellectual property (IP) protections in which the United States leads the world.  Indeed, our more free-market approach explains why America leads the world in lifesaving healthcare innovation, accounting for an astonishing two-thirds of all new drugs introduced to the world each year:

The reasons that MFN schemes would only exacerbate…[more]

November 19, 2025 • 08:48 AM

Liberty Update

CFIFs latest news, commentary and alerts delivered to your inbox.
Anti-COVID Technology Makes Returning to Work Safer
By Betsy McCaughey
Wednesday, April 29 2020
Governor Andrew Cuomo is allowing upstate construction and assembly line businesses to reopen May 15, but other businesses have to stay shut longer. How long? That depends on how "essential" they are, he said. Sorry, Governor, but any business is essential if it's how you earn your paycheck. People need to work, and new research indicates for otherwise healthy, working-age people, it's safer than taking a car trip. "People under 65 years old have very small risks of COVID-19 deaths even in the hotbeds of the pandemic," according to Stanford scientists John Ioannidis, Cathrine…
 
Facebook Fails the Coronavirus Test
A scattering of protests aimed at state lockdowns erupted across the country last week, sparked not by…
Read more...
“Net Neutrality”: Pandemic Vindicates FCC Chairman Ajit Pai
Among its other byproducts, the coronavirus pandemic has exposed the asininity of casting every item…
Read more...
 
Pandemic Is But One of America's Security Concerns
The world was a dangerous place before – and will be after – the coronavirus pandemic.…
Read more...
As Virus Rages, Leaders Keep Dodging Blame
Why are some leaders so reluctant to admit that in the early days of the coronavirus crisis, they were…
Read more...
 
Public Being Misled About Masks
New York, New Jersey, Maryland and other states are requiring everyone to wear a mask or a substitute…
Read more...
Coronavirus Authoritarianism Is Getting Out of Hand
It's reasonable to assume that the vast majority of Americans process news and data, and calculate that…
Read more...
 
“Big Pharma” Slurs Conspicuously Disappear
George Orwell sardonically noted the ease with which some preach pacifism from behind the protective…
Read more...
We Are Approaching COVID-19 Gut-Check Time
We are a few days away from a rendezvous with some tough conclusions about COVID-19. A number of concurrent…
Read more...
 
Liability Protections Needed for Those on Frontlines of COVID-19 Response and Relief Efforts
The Center for Individual Freedom (CFIF) today joined a coalition of nearly two dozen organizations,…
Read more...
Shutdown Could Kill More Americans Than COVID-19
Thursday's unemployment update confirms that over the last three weeks, nearly 17 million Americans have…
Read more...
Notable Quote   
 
"Amazing: Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson thinks 'nonpartisan experts' should be controlling key parts of the federal government while the president and other 'people who don't know anything' sit on the sidelines letting 'PhD's' make the important decisions.She made these shockingly elitist remarks during Monday's oral arguments in a case about the president's authority to fire officers of 'independent…[more]
 
 
— New York Post Editorial Board
 
Liberty Poll   

Are you as confident as Fed Chair Powell and some other Fed governors seem to be that next year's overall U.S. economy will improve significantly, without the need for foreseeable further rate cuts?