International bureaucracies are undermining America’s energy policies.
Topic: Regulatory capture
The CFPB’s Open Banking Mandate Is About to Break Rent
The CFPB’s open banking mandate, the 1033 rule, poses a critical risk to America’s rent payments.
Report: Black Market Payday
How government price controls created an illicit supply of emergency credit.
An Overdue Course Correction at the CFPB
Acting CFPB Director Russ Vought’s rollback of state enforcement overreach marks a critical return to legal restraint, restoring constitutional balance and regulatory clarity to America’s financial system.
How comparison shopping tools and lead generators revolutionize consumer access to products and services.
CFPB is doing more harm than good, and its dissolution is not just a policy preference but an economic necessity.
The FCC’s one-to-one consent rule would have disrupted vital industries, reduced access to services, and driven up costs.
Victory: Court Deals FCC’s One to One Consent Rule a Major Blow
Businesses, consumers, and innovators scored a major victory as the FCC’s overreaching one-to-one consent rule was struck down.
Newsmax: A Boon for Foreign Call Centers, a Blow to US Jobs
Originally published at newsmax.com on January 22, 2025. With the inauguration of Donald Trump and the leadership shakeup at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the regulatory landscape is shifting. Brendan Carr has replaced Jessica Rosenworcel as FCC chair, and a new Republican majority now controls the Commission. However, one impending issue—the FCC’s one-to-one consent rule—threatens to harm everyday Americans more than […]
Is Elon Musk Serious with his “Delete CFPB” Tweet?
In a late-night post on his social media platform X, billionaire entrepreneur and incoming Department of Government Efficiency head Elon Musk made a bold declaration: “Delete CFPB. There are too many duplicative regulatory agencies.” Musk’s succinct yet striking comment has ignited a vital debate about the role and efficacy of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau […]
