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.
Trump-Backed Immigration Bill Has Many Critics, But Voters Like It
By Byron York
Wednesday, August 16 2017
Some Democrats and their advocates in the press have been quick to denounce the RAISE Act, the new immigration reform bill proposed by Republican Sens. Tom Cotton and David Perdue and endorsed by President Trump. "The Trump, Cotton, Perdue bill is rooted in the same anti-immigrant, xenophobic, and isolationist rhetoric that was a cornerstone of the Trump campaign," said senior House Democrats John Conyers and Zoe Lofgren. "A xenophobic half-measure," added Rep. Ed Markey. "A play to the xenophobic sentiments that lifted Trump to the presidency," wrote the Washington…
 
By Firing the Google Memo Author, the Company Confirms His Thesis
Most of the mainstream media refers to the former Google engineer's leaked internal memo as the "anti-diversity…
Read more...
An Inconvenient Week: Al Gore Exposed as Climate Hypocrite, Bombs at Box Office
It's been a difficult week for Al Gore.  Its tragicomic quality was amplified because it was supposed…
Read more...
 
How Did the Dems' IT Scandal Suspects Get Here?
Here is a radical proposition: The public has a right to know the immigration status and history of foreign…
Read more...
Single-Payer Will Cut Boomers' Lives Short
If you're a baby boomer, you're expecting Medicare to pay for that knee replacement or cataract operation…
Read more...
 
State Department Divided On Mission
As part of what he calls a "redesign" of the State Department, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson…
Read more...
Get Government Out of the College Discrimination Business
According to The New York Times, the civil rights division of the Trump administration's Justice Department…
Read more...
 
President Trump Should Rescind Congressional ObamaCare Immunity
By now it's apparent that majorities in Congress consider ObamaCare too precious to repeal and replace. …
Read more...
Keeping Devin Nunes Out of the Game
In early April, news reports were filled with word that House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes…
Read more...
 
Procter & Gamble's Identity-Politics Pandering
Once upon a time, brothers-in-law William Procter and James Gamble sold candles and soap. Their 19th-century…
Read more...
Media Keep Butchering the Facts About Obamacare
Since its passage, and in a way that is unlike any policy issue in modern American history, the press…
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?