The U.S. House Energy & Commerce Committee's Health Subcommittee today will host the third hearing…
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340B Drug Pricing Program Contributes to Rising Healthcare Costs and Is Ripe for Reform

The U.S. House Energy & Commerce Committee's Health Subcommittee today will host the third hearing in its health care affordability series, specifically examining the role providers and hospitals play in shaping the cost of care for Americans.

While the hearing will likely examine numerous issues, there is none more ripe for reform than the flawed 340B drug pricing program.

Originally enacted to help eligible safety-net providers buy medicines at steep discounts and pass the savings on to lower-income and vulnerable patients, the program has ballooned as a revenue stream for many participating hospitals and contract pharmacy chains.

As the size and complexity of the 340B program has expanded, participating hospitals and contract pharmacies have instead used the program to increase…[more]

March 18, 2026 • 08:46 AM
Harvard Law Journal Study: Fewer Guns Don't Mean Less Crime
By Timothy H. Lee
Thursday, April 07 2016
When itemizing Second Amendment intellectual redoubts, Harvard Law School rarely comes to mind.  Across America, record numbers of everyday Americans possess firearms, a record number of states have relaxed their firearm restrictions and public support of the individual right to keep and bear arms remains at historical highs.  Insulated urban and academic centers like Harvard, however, remain stubbornly resistant to the realities accepted and even embraced by most Americans.  But perhaps even those pockets of resistance are coming to terms with the facts, like isolated Japanese…
 
Requiem for a VA Victim
What does a suffering military veteran have to do to force an unresponsive government to change its ways?…
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Government Dysfunction Costs Lives
Every year, more than half a million patients in the U.S. are unknowingly put at risk of contracting…
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CFIF Launches National Media Campaign to Oppose House "Super Chapter 9" Bankruptcy Legislation for Puerto Rico
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Center for Individual Freedom (CFIF) today announced a national media campaign…
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Sanders Is Getting Away With Murder
I've resisted coming down too hard on the honorable Bernard Sanders of Vermont. He and I grew up in the…
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Federal Court Humiliates IRS in Conservative Groups' Lawsuit
Americans outraged by Obama Administration and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) efforts to target and persecute…
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Clinton's Phony Health Care Fixes
The Clinton campaign is finally owning up to what most Americans learned the hard way. The Affordable…
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Nuclear Jihad: The Threats Are Inside Our Tent
It's not over. It's never over. After last week's deadly airport and subway bombings in Brussels, the…
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Supreme Hypocrisy
If there is one thing that is bipartisan in Washington, it is brazen hypocrisy. Currently there is much…
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A Tale of Two Legacies: Reagan at Brandenburg Gate, Obama Beneath Che Guevara
For American presidents, overseas appearances provide trademark moments that symbolize them and cement…
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Post-Jihad Gesture Theater: Je Suis Sick of It
While homicidal, suicidal and genocidal jihadists are busy plotting the next soft-target terror attacks…
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Notable Quote   
 
"The prognosis of the Iran War is now so couched in politics and so warped by the American Left that the public has grown tired and wants it all to go away. But in truth, the situation is so fluid that any accurate prediction is impossible. Yet there is good reason to believe in an eventual outcome quite favorable to the U.S. and one far better than the status quo ante bellum. ...Prior to President…[more]
 
 
— Victor Davis Hanson, Distinguished Fellow at Center for American Greatness and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution
 
Liberty Poll   

If Iran is allowed to retain its existing stockpile of nuclear material and, even temporarily, maintain control of the Strait of Hormuz, will the war have been worth it?