From Terror Sanctions to Military Strikes? Trump's Cartel Policy Sidesteps Congress
Federal terrorist lists were not supposed to be an open-ended war authorization. But it sure looks like it’s being used as one.
Federal terrorist lists were not supposed to be an open-ended war authorization. But it sure looks like it’s being used as one.
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression is seeking an injunction that would protect noncitizens at The Stanford Daily from arrest and removal because of their published work.
A recently disclosed bulletin from October 2023 shows the Inception-like nature of national security politics.
The STOP HATE Act wants social media platforms to report their moderation policies and outcomes to the government. And it’s not the only censorial measure Rep. Josh Gottheimer wants.
The government's gaslighting strategy suggests that federal officials are not confident about the constitutionality of punishing students for expressing anti-Israel views.
After being ilegally deported and imprisoned in El Salvador, they will now be sent back to the oppressive regime they fled in the first place, in exchange for ten Americans detained by the Venezuelan government.
The widely resented and ridiculed policy, which the U.S. was nearly alone in enforcing, never made much sense.
The report includes no mentions of Hamas’ attacks or hostages.
The government’s lawyers also say that supposedly nonexistent policy is perfectly consistent with the First Amendment.
The president's cruel and pointless ban on immigration or visits from nationals of 12 countries will have no significant safety benefit for Americans.
The presumptive Democratic nominee for mayor of New York has repeatedly missed opportunities to forthrightly condemn antisemitic violence.
The conflict with Iran is the latest in a decadeslong series of regime change operations, long-term entanglements, and all-out wars that always seem to invite more problems.
Former official Brian K. Williams just admitted that he faked a bomb threat during a work meeting. Now he faces up to 10 years in prison.
The president’s speech in Saudi Arabia promised a new course for U.S. policy in the Middle East. Can he deliver?
Plus: Conclave time, land acknowledgements, deporting to Libya, and more...
"It is unthinkable that a person in a free society could be snatched from the street, imprisoned, and threatened with deportation for expressing an opinion the government dislikes," says FIRE.
Just a quarter of respondents said they favored deporting students for "expressing pro-Palestine views."
But one of the pro-pseudonymity decisions on which the court relies (which also involved a lawsuit alleging anti-Semitic behavior) was actually reversed two weeks ago.
The detention of Tufts graduate student Rumeysa Ozturk illustrates the startling breadth of the authority the secretary of state is invoking.
City University of New York professor Peter Beinart and AEI's Michael Rubin debate Israel and Palestine.
The Trump administration keeps arresting legal immigrants with views they don't like.
The Trump administration has started a pattern of trying to deport legal residents over allegations of pro-terrorist views.
The rationale for deporting Mahmoud Khalil is chillingly vague and broad.
A recently filed amicus brief in Fuld v. PLO.
It's far from the first case of terrorism inflation.
Designating cartels as terrorist organizations could allow the feds to prosecute people who pay protection money—and might pave the way for undeclared war.
The Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal that went into effect today exchanges hundreds of terrorists for 33 Israeli hostages. It will predictably incentivize more hostage-taking and terrorism.
The Department of Homeland Security is watching men who are mad they can’t get girlfriends.
The court "grant[s] victims access to non-evidentiary pretrial proceedings from their homes and offices by Zoom and telephone, as well as access to livestreamed video and audio feeds of evidentiary and trial proceedings in courthouses across the United States and other secure, monitored locations around the world."
The risk of migrant terrorism is low, immigrants generally have lower crime rates than natives, and migration restrictions are both unjust and less effective than other strategies for reducing violence.
The government has given itself special powers to deal with crimes that it could already prosecute.
Researchers went back to check Palestinian casualty reports from October 2023. They found a deadlier month for civilians—and children—than any other chapter of the "war on terror."
Turkey is taking advantage of the power vacuum in Syria to crush the Kurdish-led anti-authoritarian uprising. And it's not clear what the U.S. wants.
The Syrian civil war is over, at least for now. But the Biden and Trump administrations both seem keen on shaping the outcome—and U.S. partners are gearing up to invade.
Administrative power over financial matters is a dangerous weapon for bypassing due process.
The Treasury Department tried to stop an overseas conference that included politicians under sanctions. Now they’re backing down.
Plus: Cognitive repairment, creative voting from Brooklynites, who we vote for here at Reason, and more...
Few problems can be resolved by grandstanding politicians threatening new penalties.
Plus: Adams administration corruption, Fauci in hindsight, Taiwan's nuclear mistake, and more...
One year ago, political figures spread a false terrorism panic that made everyone less free—and incited violence against a child.
When civilians are the targets, terrorists’ grievances don’t matter; it’s time to hunt the perpetrators.
Plus: Longshoremen are ending their strike, the E.U. will impose huge new tariffs, and more...
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