Why January Wasn’t the Cruelest Month for Obamacare

January looked like a disaster in the making for the Affordable Care Act. From the stunted opening of Healthcare.gov on Oct. 1 through the end of December, 2.2 million Americans selected private health plans on the new marketplace (with policies starting on Jan. 1). Between Read More …

Government Programs Have Become One Big Scammer Fraud Fest

Amongst all the polls about how various groups view their prospects going into 2014, I’d like to see one polling people who habitually defraud the government.  I bet it would be off-the-charts positive, as they look for a banner scammer year.   We are being Read More …

The College Degrees With The Highest Starting Salaries

The final results are in for the class of 2013: Bachelor’s degree graduates are earning salaries that are 2.6% higher than they were in 2012. The average: $45,600. Though engineering majors still earn more than grads with other degrees, with an average starting salary of Read More …

Speculations on Medicaid Fraud in the New Year

The year 2018 has ushered in immense changes in government policy, with President Donald Trump and his administration’s attempt to reform healthcare coverage for Americans nationwide under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. These new changes could affect the number of Medicaid fraud cases this Read More …

Woman’s New Antagonism at Work

In a follow-up to the article I posted last week on Women in Wall Street, a human-interest story on shifting gender roles in the workplace, I would like to share some hurdles I observe that still exist for professional women. As a female lawyer who Read More …

Even Gifted Students Can’t Keep Up In Math and Science, the Best Fend for Themselves

  In a post-smokestack age, there is only one way for the United States to avoid a declining standard of living, and that is through innovation. Advancements in science and engineering have extended life, employed millions and accounted for more than half of American economic Read More …