In our latest Liberty Update, CFIF highlights the debut of the "Most Favored Patient" initiative, which…
CFIF on X CFIF on YouTube
Image of the Day: Drug Prices Are CHEAPER in the U.S. Than Other Developed Nations

In our latest Liberty Update, CFIF highlights the debut of the "Most Favored Patient" initiative, which offers the optimal blueprint going forward for lower drug costs, greater access and better healthcare.

Well, the policy heavyweights behind Most Favored Patient come from the group at Unleash Prosperity, including Steve Forbes, Stephen Moore, Phil Kerpen, and Thomas Philipson.  And in addition to their new work at Most Favored Patient, they've unveiled a new commentary explaining how drug prices in the U.S. are actually cheaper than in other developed nations with which we're often unfairly compared:

It IS true that Americans pay more for new drugs under patent. That, of course, is because American pharmaceutical companies spend billions of dollars inventing the major breakthrough…[more]

August 20, 2025 • 08:24 PM

Liberty Update

CFIFs latest news, commentary and alerts delivered to your inbox.
Is the Chris Christie Campaign Over Before It Even Started?
By Troy Senik
Thursday, May 07 2015
You know what they say: the bigger they are, the harder they fall. It was only a few short years ago that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie had the high-class problem of shooing away Republicans begging him to enter the 2012 presidential race. Back then, the calculus was simple: Mitt Romney looked weak, the rest of the field looked amateurish and Christie — who had set bonfires across New Jersey’s deep blue political landscape — looked like a man who was ready to take his star turn on the national stage. Oh, how times have changed. As he considers a 2016 presidential run, Christie’s…
 
What Assata Taught Me
"What Assata taught me" is the new "Hands up, don't shoot." For $35, you, too, can…
Read more...
Race, Politics and Lies
Among the many painful ironies in the current racial turmoil is that communities scattered across the…
Read more...
 
New Pew Poll Shows Record 2nd Amendment Support, While Baltimore Citizens Take Up Arms
For decades, Second Amendment antagonists have alleged that its protections are an anachronism, an outdated…
Read more...
Of Course Democrats Deserve the Blame for What's Happening in Baltimore
If a person happens to point out that Baltimore's criminally inept government has been run exclusively…
Read more...
 
Two-Thirds of ObamaCare Subsidy Recipients Had To Pay Back the IRS
If you like your ObamaCare subsidy, chances are you won’t be able to keep it. “Almost two-thirds…
Read more...
Debunking Obama's Bilious Baltimore Babble
It's never enough. American taxpayers have surrendered billions and billions and billions of dollars…
Read more...
 
About Those Smoking Guns
In January, Robert F. McDonnell, 71st governor of Virginia, was sentenced to two years in prison followed…
Read more...
For Hillary Clinton, No War but the Class War
Near the end of a recent New York Times article detailing the imaginary populist roots of Hillary Clinton…
Read more...
 
Ten Years After Kelo, Supreme Court Can Make Property Rights Course Correction
"...nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation."  —United…
Read more...
Three Senators, Three Challenges: Cruz, Paul, Rubio and the Road to the White House
Republicans have no idea how good they have it. Back in 2012, the GOP presidential field looked like…
Read more...
Notable Quote   
 
"A Democratic National Committee meeting on Tuesday devolved into an anti-Israel slugfest, leading its chairman, Ken Martin, to pull a resolution many party members believed was not harsh enough on the Jewish state. Instead, Martin invited the anti-Israel members to join a committee to reevaluate the party's position on Israel.The Martin-backed resolution, which the DNC initially approved, called…[more]
 
 
— Adam Kredo, Washington Free Beacon
 
Liberty Poll   

Apropos of Labor Day, do you believe that corporate CEOs are right to require employees to be in the office for a specified number of weekly days, in the interests of corporate direction, efficiency and output?