U.S. Pushes Ahead With Derivatives Regulation
HOLMES: Free trade as a stimulus strategy
Waxman’s Lower Standards Do Not Reduce Costs to Consumers
In Britain, Government Pays Out, While Private Pay Shrinks
Dollar’s Fate in Our Hands, Not China’s
Sacrificing Security for One Day of Stimulus Spending
A Carbon Tax Is An Economy Killer, Too
Refuting Leftist Myths with Heritage’s Book of Charts
Public Sector Unions Gone Wild
The End of Federalism: COPS Edition
Morning Bell: The Public-Sector Union Threat to Economic Recovery
Jim Rogers: Food Prices Will Skyrocket
Paulson Forced TARP Down Banks Throats
Obama’s ‘Public’ Health Plan Will Bankrupt the Nation
Raise Rates Soon or Face Inflation Disaster, Experts Warn
Insurance Companies Approved for TARP Money – The Washington Post:
The Treasury on Thursday granted preliminary approval for several of the nation’s largest insurance companies to receive capital infusions under the government’s Troubled Assets Relief Program, a Treasury spokesperson said. The recipients include Hartford, Prudential, Lincoln National, and Principal Financial Group, the official said.
Treasury Seeks More Financial Regulations in Shadowy Markets
Beginning of the end? Fed cannot account for $9 trillion
David Frum: Quick fix today, crisis tomorrow in Obama’s White House
Strong appetite for silver boosts coin production
Chrysler Moves to Eliminate 789 of 3,200 Dealership
Celente: The Bailout Bubble: The Bubble to End All Bubbles
Stock Optmists Need to Read a History of the Great Depression
EU Plans Bank Stress Tests in Europe
Asian Stock Markets Edge Up as Spring Ralley Loses Fizz
Luxembourg: Angry Steelworkers Storm ArcelorMittal (World Biggest Steelmaker)
Obama: Credit Card Bill Critical to Fix Ailing Economy
US “Sham” Bank Bailouts Enrich Speculators
GM Plans to Export [Chinese-Built] Cars to the US
“Green Shoots” Wither on Poor US Retail Sales Figures
Obama Says Debt Load ‘Unsustainable’; Warns of skyrocketing interest rates
CASH: Schwarzenegger to propose selling San Quentin
California governor sees $15.4 billion gap