Washington Examiner / Magazine
April 21, 2020 Issue
April 21, 2020 Print Edition
Cover Story
How to get the economy back into gear
"We may or may not have flattened the curve," Fox News's Brit Hume said recently, "but we've certainly flattened the economy." With that, Hume captured the fundamental dilemma of the nation's response to the coronavirus crisis. The methods federal and state officials chose to reduce the spread of infection — stay-at-home orders, closing "nonessential" businesses, limiting the size of gatherings — have involved enormous damage to the economy. After a period of early optimism in which some believed the disease could be conquered and then — presto! — the economy quickly turned back on, a more sobering reality has set in. What lies ahead is a long period of restoration, as well as a tricky and difficult path back to physical, and then economic, health. How should it begin? The first issue to consider is why the economy is actually shut down. Is it the result of all those government restrictions on public and private life? Listening to the media debate, there is a widespread impression that the government closed the economy and the government can open it back up. But some of the officials most thoughtfully considering how to move forward don't see it that way. "What has caused the economy to grind to a halt is not some governor or mayor's order, or some public health bureaucrat's recommendation," said Arkansas Republican Sen. Tom Cotton, who warned of the coronavirus's danger back in January....

Stories that matter—told with clarity and conviction.

Your Land

Living vicariously through Animal Crossing
Magazine - Your Land
Living vicariously through Animal Crossing
Last night, I visited a neighbor’s home. Then, I went fishing and sold some wooden stakes I made...
Just a phone call away
Magazine - Your Land
Just a phone call away
You really should call your mother more often. You know that. I know that. None of us did...
Chicken wing surplus
Magazine - Your Land
Chicken wing surplus
Toilet paper is hard to find. Hand sanitizer is only available if you make it yourself. Some retailers...
Modern family
Magazine - Your Land
Modern family
About 4 in 10 babies born in America today are born to unmarried parents, and it’s an outright...
Magazine - Your Land
The plague of noise
Burlington, Vermont, the first city to run entirely on green energy, launched Bernie Sanders’s political career in the 1970s, and it launches the F-35 a few times a...

Business

Beware the Left’s ‘degrowth’ movement
Magazine - Business
Beware the Left’s ‘degrowth’ movement
It would be natural to believe that nearly everyone on the planet is horrified by the...
Shutting down economy creates risk of causing depression
Business
Shutting down economy creates risk of causing depression
The coronavirus pandemic that forced businesses across the nation to close will likely send the economy...

Washington Briefing

Economy
The small circle plotting Trump’s economic reopening
The list went on and on. “Wendy’s, Waffle House, Starbucks, Wolfgang Puck, Thomas Keller, Jean-Georges —...
Magazine - Washington Briefing
Coronavirus escalates calls to allow Congress to legislate remotely
The coronavirus threat has shuttered Congress for weeks. It has led to rare bipartisan agreement among...
Energy and Environment
Carbon capture affected by the coronavirus
Carbon capture technology was just coming into its moment. The roster of newly announced projects was...
Magazine - Washington Briefing
One hundred days in, Space Force has two service members
When U.S. Space Cmdr. Gen. John Raymond stood at a Pentagon podium shortly after the 100-day...
Letter from editor
Democrats discover ‘rigged’ elections
Remember when it was bad to describe elections as “rigged?” Such terminology was Exhibit A proving President Donald Trump’s anti-democratic...

Life & Arts

Stories that matter—told with clarity and conviction.