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Reason November 2007 Rogier van Bakel |
'The Trouble Is the West' Best-selling memoirist and former member of the Dutch parliament, Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Islam, immigration, civil liberties, and the fate of the West.  |
Reason November 2007 Radley Balko |
CSI: Mississippi Forensic doctor Steven Hayne's career in court is an egregious example of what happens when the criminal justice system fails to adequately oversee expert testimony.  |
Reason November 2007 Roger Koppl |
Breaking Up the Forensics Monopoly America's forensics system, the part of our criminal justice system responsible for scientific examinations of crime-scene evidence like fingerprints and DNA, is rife with errors. Here are eight ways to fix the broken system.  |
Reason November 2007 Nick Gillespie |
Artifact: Licensing Global Terror Arguably, the strangest of Oklahoma's automobile specialty license plates is a relatively new offering bearing the phrase "Global War on Terrorism."  |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2007 Catherine Arnst |
America's Angry Patients U.S. patients pay more, wait longer to be seen, and suffer a higher rate of medical mistakes.  |
BusinessWeek November 12, 2007 Eamon Javers |
The Frozen Chosen Thanks to its pipeline payoff, Alaska has $40 billion stashed away  |
InternetNews November 2, 2007 |
FTC Says Internet Ad Self-Regulation Falling Short Regulators scrutinize online advertising and the industry's data-collection and behavioral targeting efforts.  |
InternetNews November 1, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Politics Turns Annoying, Threatening On The Web Political issues are finding their way to the Web in some ugly ways.  |
InternetNews November 1, 2007 |
FTC Reviewing Google Ad Deal 'Expeditiously' U.S. antitrust authorities are reviewing Google's purchase of advertising company DoubleClick as quickly as possible, Federal Trade Commissioner Jon Leibowitz said.  |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2007 John Churchill |
Subprime Mess: Merrill and Goldman Reportedly Under Eye of SEC The subprime debt market blowup has had very different effects on Wall Street firms Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, but both firms could be getting a visit from the SEC to make sure everyone played by the rules.  |
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