Mothers Are Losing Custody Over Sketchy Drug Tests
Some hospitals are even reporting women for testing positive for drugs that were given to them during labor.
Some hospitals are even reporting women for testing positive for drugs that were given to them during labor.
Some players like the game to mimic the real world. Others like to play as Gandhi but nuke their enemies into oblivion.
Three libertarians—Dave Smith, J.D. Tuccille, and Liz Wolfe—revisit their reluctant votes for Trump, weighing the promises, chaos, and consequences of his second term so far.
The Department of Justice told the Supreme Court there were "policy tradeoffs that an officer makes" in determining if he should "take one more extra precaution" to make sure he's at the right house.
Residents of the United Kingdom will get lower tariffs, while Americans are stuck paying higher ones.
The survey estimates that 7.5 percent of America adults use illegally produced fentanyl each year, 25 times the rate indicated by a government-sponsored survey.
Ozturk's continued detention "potentially chills the speech of the millions and millions of people in this country who are not citizens," said U.S. District Judge William K. Sessions III.
Mahendra Patel was charged with battery, assault, and attempted kidnapping. He was granted bond.
Even after the Biden administration realized the most alarming claims were bunk, it didn't publicize the evidence it had.
Lawmakers passed the largest spending plan in state history, pushing costs higher without delivering results.
The right number of dolls? As many as your kid wants.
Co-founder of AQR Capital Management, Cliff Asness, discusses the decline of market efficiency, the dangers of populist economics, and his libertarian outlook on capitalism.
Plus: Habemus papam, deporting grannies, and more...
Environmental Protection Agency
The federal agency has a history of overreaching its authority and threatening liberty.
Even in a fictitious postapocalyptic world, the government can't be trusted to tell the truth.
The animated Invincible series wrestles with the ethics of killing for the greater good.
The bill "raises the risk of malware," warns one tech expert.
Martin is a bully and a menace to free speech. Unfortunately for him, his own free speech caught up with him.
The results were completely foreseeable, after the president imposed 25 percent tariffs on all imported automobiles and parts.
Federal Trade Commissioner Mark Meador wants conservatives to sacrifice Americans’ economic well-being to break up big businesses.
We don't need more of the same. We need evidence of a serious turnaround.
Microschools are giving educators the freedom to innovate. Regulators need to get out of the way.
Progressives used to believe in building more stuff. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson want to do that again.
Despite persistent violence in schools, very few states designate schools as "persistently dangerous."
The program is beyond the proper scope of the federal government.
Protections apply even when the animal is on your property and getting closer.
America is not a department store. And no successful department store would be following Trump's antitrade strategy.
Democrats did the right thing, got attacked for it, then caved.
In a Monday legal filing, lawyers for the Trump administration argue that an effort by red states to ban mail-order abortion drugs lacks standing.
The Harvard psychologist discusses recent gains for free speech at Harvard, growing political and ideological threats to academic freedom, and the importance of shared knowledge in sustaining truth and progress.
The death of a onetime powerhouse carries a lesson for antitrust enforcers—if they’ll listen.
The pendulum within Trump’s Middle East policy has swung back toward deal making, for now.
Despite the fearmongering from teachers unions, it's largely useless.
Plus: Conclave time, land acknowledgements, deporting to Libya, and more...
Trump’s tariffs aren’t just bad economics—they’re a rejection of abundance, prosperity, and capitalism itself.
Tariffs on creative media are barriers not just to goods, but also to ideas.
As he shifts his focus away from DOGE, he acknowledges the need for hard choices and congressional action.
A declassified assessment contradicts the president's assertion that Tren de Aragua is "closely aligned with" the Venezuelan government and acts at its "direction."
Slate Auto hopes to offer affordable electric vehicles, but it has to navigate federal incentives and restrictions in the process.
The lawsuit challenges a Day 1 executive order signed by the president to halt federal leasing for offshore wind energy projects.
Plus: Arkansas legalizes ADUs, activists sue to stop missing middle housing, and Trump's housing plans for federal lands
Local governments love giving sweetheart deals to billion-dollar companies—now data centers instead of football stadiums.
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