In this superb column, Daniel Mitchell discusses the Fluke Furor — the tempest in a teapot that has arisen from the preposterous, staged, testimony of that Georgetown Law student to the effect that she’s entitled to birth control at the expense of the university. Mitchell’s sensible take is, I won’t interfere with what you do in your bedroom, but you shouldn’t interfere with my wallet.

Toward the end of the column, he mentions recent JLF speaker Timothy Carney and his Fusionist Theorem that makes clear the common ground between libertarians and social conservatives: Moral law should guide our personal actions, and individual liberty should guide our political decisions.