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Dear Friend,

Forty-one years after Ronald Reagan famously spoke at the Neshoba county fair, I attended for the first time. It was amazing!

I loved listening to a great line up of speakers, and it seems to me that there is more common sense to be found on the platform at the Neshoba fair than in the whole of Washington DC.

The issue of how to tackle Critical Race Theory in our schools came up, and I was pleased that much of what was said chimed with my recent article on Critical Race Theory in the Northside Sun.

Other topics speakers talked about included abolishing state income tax, Covid recovery and the economy. 

To learn more about what we are doing, as Mississippi’s free market think tank, to advocate free market solutions on all this, do please read some of the articles we published this week listed below.

Have a restful weekend!

Warm Regards,

Douglas Carswell
President & CEO
 
MJI Director Aaron Rice discusses how In the 1950s, only one out of twenty people required a government permission slip to do their job. Today, that number has skyrocketed to nearly one in three. And most of those licenses are for working class jobs.
Communications Director Hunter Estes discusses the major increase in support for school choice and why now is the moment to push for substantive educational change that can help our students.
In this piece, Matthew Nicaud discusses how private stewardship could be the best way to conserve Mississippi's natural beauty.
Our CEO, Douglas Carswell, and the Pelican Institute for Public Policy's CEO, Daniel Erspamer, co-wrote this op-ed in Tech Policy Press that highlights some of the major findings of our broadband report.
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