From Cato Today <[email protected]>
Subject China's Dangerous 2-Child Policy
Date July 22, 2020 11:05 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Neo-malthusian ideology is dangerous at best, genocidal at worst. What we need to do for American innovation.

View in browser ([link removed] )

July 22, 2020

Protesting ([link removed] )

What We Need to do for American Innovation ([link removed] )

Both Donald Trump and Joe Biden have plans to increase subsidies, protectionism, and procurement mandates while ignoring how freer markets and expanded immigration could help the U.S. economy.

- We'll Do Anything for American Innovation, But We Won't Do That ([link removed] )

By Scott Lincicome

China Flag ([link removed] )

Neo-Malthusianism Is a Dangerous Mistake ([link removed] )

Every family deserves the right to decide for themselves how many children, if any, they wish to have, free of government meddling. Neo‐​Malthusian concerns, both historically and today, have been used to justify restricting that right, sometimes violently.

- Uyghur Genocide Shows Urgency of Combatting Neo-Malthusianism ([link removed] )

By Chelsea Follett

FEATURED ARTICLES

Portland and the Paramilitarization of the Border Patrol ([link removed] )

CBP’s nascent role as a cut‐​rate secret police force that operates at the discretion of the executive branch is merely one manifestation of the creeping, bi‐​partisan paramilitarization of the federal government.

Read more ([link removed] )

Would the Prophet Muhammad Convert Hagia Sophia? ([link removed] )

Turkey’s decision to change the former cathedral into a mosque flies against the pluralist instincts of Islam’s founders.

Read more ([link removed] )

The Failure of Academic Progress in Cybersecurity ([link removed] )

Academic progress in cybersecurity studies from a social sciences perspective has been slow. In order to develop as a field, it needs a methodological framework, more developed theories, and collaboration that transcends disciplinary boundaries.

Read more ([link removed] )

Sign Up For Other Cato Newsletters ([link removed] )

SUPPORT CATO ([link removed] )

Facebook ([link removed] )

LinkedIn ([link removed] )

Twitter ([link removed] )

Instagram ([link removed] )

YouTube ([link removed] )

Cato Institute, 1000 Massachusetts Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20001, (202) 842-0200

Manage preferences ([link removed] )
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis