Reason.com - Free Minds and Free Markets
Reason logo Reason logo
  • Latest
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Crossword
  • Video
  • Podcasts
    • All Shows
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
    • The Soho Forum Debates
    • Just Asking Questions
    • The Best of Reason Magazine
    • Why We Can't Have Nice Things
  • Volokh
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
    • Donate Online
    • Donate Crypto
    • Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
    • Torchbearer Society
    • Planned Giving
  • Subscribe
    • Reason Plus Subscription
    • Print Subscription
    • Gift Subscriptions
    • Subscriber Support

Login Form

Create new account
Forgot password

California

California Sex Trafficking Fight Erupts Over Punishment for Soliciting Minors

Democrats did the right thing, got attacked for it, then caved.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 5.7.2025 1:08 PM

Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests
American flag and California flag | Photo by <a href="https://unsplash.com/@lnicolern?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash">Lesli Whitecotton</a> on <a href="https://unsplash.com/photos/a-flag-on-a-palm-tree-n9tDI9ZhbtQ?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash">Unsplash</a>
(Photo by Lesli Whitecotton on Unsplash )

It's rare to see politicians of any stripe fight against sex-trafficking overreach—or any tough-on-crime gestures, really. In California, Democrats have been finding out what happens when you do. After pushing back somewhat against an overly carceral bill targeting prostitution customers, they were tarred by Republicans as having voted "to protect predators" and being "a threat to our kids' safety."

It's become "the biggest controversy Sacramento has seen in a while," notes The Sacramento Bee.

Now, of course, Democrats are backtracking.

You are reading Sex & Tech, from Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Get more of Elizabeth's sex, tech, bodily autonomy, law, and online culture coverage.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Solicitation Law Changes Proposed

The bill—an amended version of which passed the California Assembly on May 1—originally came from Sacramento Rep. Maggy Krell, herself a Democrat and a former prosecutor. Krell worked on a failed case against Backpage and then wrote a book about it, so being tough on prostitution is basically her whole shtick now. But Assembly Bill 379, introduced in February, is a bad bill.

It would create a new prostitution loitering law—the kind of thing that lets cops target people for merely looking like they might be about to engage in prostitution. And it would institute a mandatory $1,000 "Survivor Support Fund" fine on anyone convicted of solicitation or loitering for solicitation (in addition to any other fines they might get).

But those aren't the controversial bits—most lawmakers in the state's Assembly were OK with those parts (alas). The big controversy concerns punishments for soliciting someone aged 16 or 17 for sex.

Krell's proposal would amend a law passed last year that treats solicitation of a minor differently based on whether a minor being solicited is over or under age 16.

Misdemeanor or Felony?

That 2024 law raised potential penalties for solicitation of a minor, moving it from a misdemeanor to a possible felony. But soliciting a minor for prostitution can only be a felony in cases where the offender is over age 18 and the person solicited is under age 16, or under age 18 and proven to be a victim of human trafficking. And even under such circumstances, authorities still have some discretion. The 2024 law made it a "wobbler" offense, with prosecutors and judges able to charge and punish it as either a misdemeanor or a felony.

Basically, the 2024 law was an acknowledgement that the broad parameters of the crime here—soliciting someone who is under age 18 for sex—don't tell us everything we need to know about moral culpability. There's a big difference between a 40-year-old man actively soliciting someone he knows to be 14 years old for sex and a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old, for instance. Or between someone soliciting a minor they know is being coerced into prostitution and a 22-year-old soliciting a 17-year-old whom they might reasonably believe to be 18 and acting independently.

Under Krell's proposal, any act of solicitation "by a defendant who is 18 years of age or older" could be punished as a felony when the person solicited was a minor (or, as it goes, a cop pretending to be one).

An amended version of the bill that passed the Assembly last week would have done away with Krell's proposed changes to the way solicitation of a minor is punished. Republicans, along with Krell and a few Democrats, opposed this amended version, but most Democrats in the state Assembly were on board with the change.

"Krell is a former prosecutor, and prosecutors tend to be hammers that see every problem as a nail," suggested Sacramento Bee op-ed writer Robin Epley, noting that the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California is opposed to the bill as originally written. Under Krell's version, "a 19- or 20-year-old dating a 16- or 17-year-old" could be charged with a felony for buying a date dinner, since prostitution doesn't require the exchange of money, just anything of value, Epley pointed out. "I believe it would be used as a cudgel to persecute out-groups—including families that disapprove of queer or interracial relationships."

"What the Democrats are trying to do here is keep some common sense written into state law so that judges and prosecutors aren't forced to treat every case the same," Epley said.

Myths, Mudslinging, and Backpedaling

So much for common sense. It seems Democrats are now reversing course, after their pushback received a lot of pushback.

"Democratic leaders in the California Assembly announced on Tuesday that…the proposed felony will be added back into AB 379, backpedaling on moves the two made last week," KCRA reported. Their one condition is that "the felony will not apply when the adult offender is within three years of the age of the minor."

Conservatives had been quick to portray Democrats as having a soft spot for predators and of not wanting to protect kids. Democrats think "buying minors for sex…isn't that bad" in some circumstances, wrote Zachary Faria at the Washington Examiner—as if nothing counts as being condemned and punished unless it's a felony.

Of course, a misdemeanor offense is still a crime, and it will still net you a criminal record and all sorts of consequences. As it stands, someone convicted of solicitation of a minor aged 16 or 17 can be sent to prison for up to a year and fined up to $10,000. And under the amended version of Krell's bill, they could also be required to pay an additional $1,000 Survivor Fund fine.

Funnily enough, those supporting Krell's proposal aren't actually as tough-on-crime as they're purporting to be. Supporters of Krell's version have suggested that it should always be a felony to solicit a minor. But her proposal would have merely made it possible to charge a felony. It would still have left solicitation of a minor—whether the person solicited was over or under age 16—as a wobbler crime capable of being treated as a misdemeanor or a felony.

This isn't the only misleading way that Krell's proposal has been portrayed. "We need to say loud and clear that if you're under 18—a child, a minor—that the person who is buying that person should be charged as a felony," said Krell. "Sex without consent is rape. The exchange of money doesn't change that."

But the crime of solicitation does not require sex or any physical activity at all to take place. It doesn't even require an actual minor to exist—many, if not most, cases charged involve stings conducted by undercover police pretending to be under age 18. Solicitation is essentially a speech crime, and equating it to rape is false and inflammatory.

An adult who offers a minor money for sex and then engages in sex with them can still be charged with unlawful sexual intercourse, lewd acts on a child, or other sex crimes, regardless of how the solicitation law is written.

So, Krell's implication that the current solicitation law lets rapists off the hook is unfounded. And unlawful sexual intercourse (a.k.a. statutory rape) in California is also punishable as either a misdemeanor or a felony, depending on the circumstances.

Prostitution Pre-Crime Bit Is Bad, Too

"Sadly, Sacramento seems to have lost the capacity to have a rational legislative conversation about sex trafficking—or just about anything when it comes to criminal justice," wrote The Sacramento Bee editorial board earlier this week.

The explosive, divisive debate over how solicitation of an older teen should be punished has overshadowed any consideration about the loitering for solicitation proposal in A.B. 379.

California repealed a similar law in 2022, amid concerns that the bill let law enforcement harass certain types of women—poor, black, transgender, etc.—merely for existing in public spaces. The new prostitution loitering law would, of course, recreate these same kinds of harms, only this time it would be used to target alleged sex customers instead of sex workers.

The loitering for solicitation offense has the potential to be a major infringement on due process, since it's essentially a prostitution pre-crime offense. Police can use it to stalk and arrest anyone they say looked like they were getting ready to solicit sex.

Any prudence Democrats showed by pushing back against parts of Krell's bill is tempered by their willingness to create a new crime that could be every bit as overreaching and dangerous to civil liberties. To really do the right thing, they should scrap this bill altogether.

Instead, it seems that they've decided to cave almost entirely.


Follow-Up on OneTaste Trial

As the OneTaste trial gets underway this week, a member of Congress is reportedly trying to intervene. "The representative has written to new FBI director Kash Patel," objecting to the way the case was handled by an FBI agent, according to The Daily Mail.

The lead FBI investigator on the case against Nicole Daedone and Rachel Cherwitz—former executives at the orgasmic meditation company OneTaste—was Special Agent Elliott McGinnis, who is accused by lawyers for Daedone and Cherwitz of a range of misconduct.

Read more about McGinnis and the case here.

"DailyMail.com has seen a letter to FBI director Patel from a Member of Congress – who is also a member of the House Judiciary Committee and a former law enforcement official – 'seeking answers' about the special agent," the Mail reported. The letter shared by the Mail accuses McGinnis of "a pattern of misconduct" and actions that "represent a fundamental corruption of the investigative process and failure of agent accountability."

Prosecutors have already had to admit that evidence vetted by the FBI in this case was not authentic, as this newsletter noted in March.

"Most disturbing is the systematic effort to transform Netflix-created content into federal evidence," it states. "This isn't just overreach—it's the deliberate fabrication of a criminal case through entertainment media."


More Sex & Tech News

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin just signed into law the Consumer Data Protection Act, which "requires social media companies in the Commonwealth to verify the age of users and limit social media use for kids under the age of 16 to one hour per app per day," per ABC 13 News. "While it's unclear how exactly, the apps would block usage after an hour."

Age verification and STD treatment bills pass the North Carolina House. A measure that passed the North Carolina House of Representatives yesterday "mandates that social media platforms delete accounts operated by users younger than 14 years old," according to ABC 11 News. "It permits 14- and 15-year-old users to join networks only with expressed parental consent. Websites and phone apps would also be required to implement age verification."

Another bill passed by the North Carolina House on Tuesday would disallow minors to consent to treatment for sexually transmitted diseases without parental approval, unless the minors are 16 or older and "the disease can be treated with a prescription with a duration of 10 days or less." The bill would also require parental approval before minors could be treated for alcohol or substance abuse problems or "emotional disturbance." A similar law is under consideration in Florida and was recently passed by the Florida House.

RIP Skype. The original Zoom shut down for good on Monday. "The decision to scrap Skype, announced in March, caps a remarkable 21-year run for a software that for many embodied the early values of the open internet," wrote Leo Sands at The Washington Post. "It was mostly free, had a user-friendly interface and made it easier for people to connect across the world. In its heyday, Skype had over 300 million users."

Today's Image

Los Angeles | 2018 (ENB/Reason)

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: Trump's Justice Department Just Defended Telehealth Abortion

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

CaliforniaSex CrimesSex TraffickingProstitutionSex WorkHuman TraffickingCriminal JusticeLaw enforcementChildrenTeenagers
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Hide Comments (48)

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.

  1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    If Democrats do something then it is wrong by definition. Doesn't matter what it is.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

      You’re just unhappy your buddy Pluggo would be charged with a felony.

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 months ago

        You’re forgetting sarc got CPS called on him. Who knows what he did.

        1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          He has become friends with Shrike, and MAPedo Jeffy, so…………

        2. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

          Who called CPS on Sarc? He won't say.

          sarcasmic 13 mins ago
          Flag Comment Mute User
          I had CPS called on me because I said sometimes dragged my kid’s feet off the bed to get her to get up. CPS said it was reported that I was “Laying hands on my child in a concerning way.”

  2. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

    "Sadly, Sacramento seems to have lost the capacity to have a rational legislative conversation about sex trafficking—or just about anything when it comes to criminal justice," wrote The Sacramento Bee editorial board earlier this week.

    Whenever any issue takes on the patina of moral panic, there is no reason.

    Any nowadays everything is a moral panic, so adjust your expectations accordingly.

    1. Strawmancasmic, Town Drunk and Gay for Booze   2 months ago

      ENB just wants to make sure there are few barriers to putting underage whores to work.

      1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

        Nice handle; been away for a bit [practiced benevolent detachment and still not sure I should be wallowing in this comment section] but I see Sarc is still the townhall drunk.

  3. Strawmancasmic, Town Drunk and Gay for Booze   2 months ago

    So ENB is for going easy on those who sex traffic minors? What a surprise.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Going easy on the sex trafficking of minors in defense of Democrats. Presumably because opposing the whole bill and both parties equally because it would definitively ensnare more people would be too libertarian and not rabies-infested batshit crazy enough.

      We've got to worry about all the cases where the next SCOTUS nominee at the age of 15 unwittingly pays a fellow 15 yr. old for sex and the unfair and (un)intended consequences of *the law* ruins the future of 15 yr. olds paying each other for sex entirely of their own volition.

      1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        Funny how democrats rationalize away all law enforcement efforts based on some hypothetical that never happens. Same with abortion.

    2. VULGAR MADMAN   2 months ago

      Don’t call them groomers though.

  4. Vesicant   2 months ago

    >a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old

    Ah yes, the old 'Romeo and Juliet' excuse -- it was young love, Your Honor, move on, nothing to see here, but ain't it sweet.

    Hey Liz, you ever hear of Jenna McKay? Just asking questions.

    1. Pear Satirical (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   2 months ago

      The fuck is wrong at Reason? A 16 year old should not work as a prostitute, nor be allowed to hire one.

      1. Scotterbee   2 months ago

        Literally no one said otherwise. Wipe the brainworms from your eyes and read the article again. It's about degrees of punishment.

        1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          Democrats regularly say otherwise, you retarded fucknut. They don’t want to be punished when they solicit sex from minors.

          1. Scotterbee   2 months ago

            Hello Jessica. I'm honestly excited to analyze your samefaggy ways

            1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

              I’m not Jesse you stupid faggot. I just swapped out my Strawmancasmic handle. I should think this I should be obvious, even to a retarded bitch like you.

        2. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

          Except for Democrats, MAPs and ENB. At least make your lies less transparent.

          1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

            ENB should really focus more on sandwich making, and less on whoring out minors.

      2. Brian DuBridge   2 months ago

        What? Like they're not f*king each other in high school for free? Sure, romantic pleasure is preferable, but anybody who's able to make the decision for themself should be able to charge for it or pay for it, if they want. It's not like they're stooping to being a lawyer! Free enterprise. Self determination. Outlaw pimps and predators, but let the people trade in what they want. Of course, if they keep it off the street, they're unlikely to run afowl of the law, anyway.

        1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

          And here is the pedophile's rationalization, good job.

          1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

            Is he a Jeffy sock?

  5. mad.casual   2 months ago

    a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old

    This is even dumber than the "Should medical professionals be forced to disclose a teens STI status to their parents/guardians?".

    It's getting to the point that I'm worried that if ENB's marriage ever starts to crumble it's going to leap straight to murder suicide, because there's no way she's going to convince anyone she's even remotely fit to parent on her own.

    1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      High school kids whorls themselves out to each other for cash isn’t really a thing.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        And they bring up a 20 yr. old simply buying a 16 yr. old dinner (in exchange for sex) and then "whatabout" queer people.

        It's not even old-school FUD. It's just throwing things at the wall to see what sticks. Things that *should* be investigated, along with things that aren't an issue. Maybe this is what people mean by pettifogging but really it's just closer to random bullshitting.

  6. JonFrum   2 months ago

    What's a little pedo prostitution among Reason friends?

    1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      ENB wants to break them in nice and young.

  7. XM   2 months ago

    It’s true, CA is known for being way too tough on crime. Almost draconian. Before trump’s self deport apps they couldn’t even leave the state in fear of being nabbed by the California Rangers. Trump set them free.

    1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

      Well, they did have this AG who was willing to enslave people for cheap labor by keeping them imprisoned past their sentence expiration.

  8. Vesicant   2 months ago

    The whole point of the term "sex work" is that there's supposedly no morality around sex, it's just transactional, and words like prostitute are bad because they're moral judgments. But then Liz can turn around and say oh, no, wait, there is a moral issue about age difference. How is that logically consistent? On what basis can you say that sex with minors is wrong? And how do you pick your age differential, Liz? It appears to be somewhere between zero (16 -16) and 26 (40 -14), but what's your magic formula?

    1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      The left’s magic for,Hal is to do away with age of consent laws entirely. Hence the resistance for making underage shoring a felony.

  9. Get To Da Chippah   2 months ago

    There's a big difference between a 40-year-old man actively soliciting someone he knows to be 14 years old for sex and a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old, for instance. Or between someone soliciting a minor they know is being coerced into prostitution and a 22-year-old soliciting a 17-year-old whom they might reasonably believe to be 18 and acting independently.

    Nevertheless, they all remain crimes. I'm with you that some of those shouldn't result in "sex offender registry for life" status, but maybe kids and young adults should be highly cautious about boning down with anyone who might be under the age of consent.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      I'm with you that some of those shouldn't result in "sex offender registry for life" status, but maybe kids and young adults should be highly cautious about boning down with anyone who might be under the age of consent.

      It also assumes the people enacting the law to be completely irrational and/or immoral, rather than imperfect dealing with an imperfect situation and Liz not to be some self-righteous omnipotent arbiter and not some pollyanna-esque, wishcasting, 40 yr. old who really, really wants a pony.

      Otherwise, if CA has cacophony of women and girls crying out against 20 yr. olds skirting the law and luring 16 yr. olds into their rape dungeons they're going to rightfully pass laws against luring girls into rape dungeons. And everybody in some place like S. Dakota who couldn't imagine dating someone under the age of 18, let alone having a rape dungeon, are going to pass different laws.

  10. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

    I saw Taxi Driver when ENB was a babe in her mother's arms. I know how this shit works.

  11. JohnZ   2 months ago

    They would better spend their time helping with the investigation of an international ring of sex and sadism predators, known as 764.

  12. Roberta   2 months ago

    The problem is all a result, as I gather from D.H. Lawrence as filtered thru Alan Watts, of society's making sex "good-bad". We're supposed to want what we're not supposed to want. It's not bad unless it's good, and it's not good unless it's bad. But we're not absolved of individual guilt in this matter.

  13. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

    Of course, a misdemeanor offense is still a crime

    Including illegal border crossing?

  14. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

    But the crime of solicitation does not require sex or any physical activity at all to take place...Solicitation is essentially a speech crime...

    So, asking a kid for sex is protected free speech as long as the kid says no?

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Technically, everything in that paragraph except "pretending to be under age 18" is pretty much 1:1 interchangeable between "solicitation for sex" and "solicitation to commit murder".

  15. Wizzle Bizzle   2 months ago

    *They were tarred by Republicans as having voted "to protect predators" and being "a threat to our kids' safety."*

    The did. And they are.

    *Conservatives had been quick to portray Democrats as having a soft spot for predators and of not wanting to protect kids.*

    They do. And they don't.

    A non-retard would be asking for a CHANGE to that bill to eliminate the 0.001% chance that the two star-crossed 16 year olds you invented could get ensnared in something that is meant entirely to protect kids from predators. A pedophile, MAP-fan, ENB, or any other flavor of Democrat would use this tiny loophole to try to get the whole law thrown out. So the creepery can continue unabated.

    People who harm kids should be killed. With a hammer. By me.

  16. AT   2 months ago

    There's a big difference between a 40-year-old man actively soliciting someone he knows to be 14 years old for sex and a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old, for instance. Or between someone soliciting a minor they know is being coerced into prostitution and a 22-year-old soliciting a 17-year-old whom they might reasonably believe to be 18 and acting independently.

    You say there's a difference between all that, but then fail to say what that difference is.

    All for the goal of having *checks notes* 14yr olds being prostituted. ENB, seriously. You should be in jail.

    "I believe it would be used as a cudgel to persecute out-groups—including families that disapprove of queer or interracial relationships."

    Ooh, there it is. Quiet part out loud.

    Scratch a gay, find a pedo.

    1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      Very true. A large number of gay activist groups have out against this bill. Probably because the gay community it’s has a real problem with underage prostitution. Which, because of “muh gay rights!”, we can’t have protections against pedophilia.

  17. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

    I suggest a compromise. We take turns. I hold them , you hit them. Then we switch.

  18. Incunabulum   2 months ago

    >Basically, the 2024 law was an acknowledgement that the broad parameters of the crime here—soliciting someone who is under age 18 for sex—don't tell us everything we need to know about moral culpability. There's a big difference between a 40-year-old man actively soliciting someone he knows to be 14 years old for sex and a 16-year-old soliciting another 16-year-old, for instance. Or between someone soliciting a minor they know is being coerced into prostitution and a 22-year-old soliciting a 17-year-old whom they might reasonably believe to be 18 and acting independently.

    ENB, obfuscation and blathering to protect predators.

    1. 16 and 17 years olds are soliciting prostitutes now, are they? This is the sort of world you've created and you think its a *good thing*.

    2. No, the 22 year old soliciting the 17 year old gets to go to jail. Stop doing that shit.

    3. You *know* that this isn't what that is about. Its about men looking for underage girls to pay to rape. The rest of your examples are there to cloud that issue.

    1. AT   2 months ago

      Actually it's more about gay men looking for groomed underage boys to pay to rape.

      But yours is a close second.

      And yes, ENB's goal is to cloud that.

      1. Z Crazy   2 months ago

        Men looking for groomed underage girls is far more common.

        Over half of all rape victims are underage girls.

  19. Saint Sabazius   2 months ago

    Just because soemthing is a "bad thing" (yes, even actual crimes like robbery and rape), doesn't instantaneously mean increasing the penalty for that bad thing is good.

Please log in to post comments

Mute this user?

  • Mute User
  • Cancel

Ban this user?

  • Ban User
  • Cancel

Un-ban this user?

  • Un-ban User
  • Cancel

Nuke this user?

  • Nuke User
  • Cancel

Un-nuke this user?

  • Un-nuke User
  • Cancel

Flag this comment?

  • Flag Comment
  • Cancel

Un-flag this comment?

  • Un-flag Comment
  • Cancel

Latest

Brickbat: Miraculously Healed

Charles Oliver | 7.9.2025 4:00 AM

The Trump Administration Says Its Speech-Based Deportation Policy 'Does Not Exist'

Jacob Sullum | 7.9.2025 12:01 AM

New Jersey Lawmakers Are Considering 2 Bills To Heavily Regulate Homeschooling

Sophia Mandt | 7.8.2025 4:00 PM

Trump Reiterates His Promise To Protect Farm and Hospitality Workers From 'Pretty Vicious' Deportation

Jacob Sullum | 7.8.2025 2:35 PM

'The Only Winner Is the Government,' Says American Bow Tie CEO Facing Higher Tariff Costs

Eric Boehm | 7.8.2025 1:25 PM

Recommended

  • About
  • Browse Topics
  • Events
  • Staff
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Media
  • Shop
  • Amazon
Reason Facebook@reason on XReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeApple PodcastsReason on FlipboardReason RSS

© 2024 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

r

Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

This modal will close in 10

Reason Plus

Special Offer!

  • Full digital edition access
  • No ads
  • Commenting privileges

Just $25 per year

Join Today!