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Social Media

#Addiction

Plus: Meta and Google found liable, what the verdict means, an OnlyFans-style campaign website, and more...

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 3.26.2026 9:34 AM

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Hand holding an iPhone showing social media apps, with Lady Justice in the background | IMAGO/Frank Hoermann / SVEN SIMON/IMAGO/Sven Simon/Newscom
(IMAGO/Frank Hoermann / SVEN SIMON/IMAGO/Sven Simon/Newscom)

It begins: anyone who's ever spent too much time on social media—or simply suffered any setbacks while simultaneously having social media accounts—can claim "addiction" and reasonably expect a big payout. A landmark verdict in California has paved the way for that, and worse.

After nearly two months of trial, a jury on Wednesday decided that Meta and Google are liable—to the tune of $6 million—for the psychological troubles plaguing now 20-year-old Kaley G.M.

The Reason Roundup Newsletter by Liz Wolfe Liz and Reason help you make sense of the day's news every morning.

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In a civil suit, Kaley claimed that addiction to YouTube and other online platforms when she was a minor led to depression, anxiety, and body dysmorphia. She originally sued four tech companies—Google, Meta, TikTok, and Snap—but the latter two settled before trial.

Her case is part of a consolidated case representing nearly 2,500 plaintiffs, and the first to come before a jury. "The trial's outcome could help spur a global settlement, though eight more bellwether trials are being prepared, with the next one scheduled to start this summer," notes Courthouse News Service.

Absolving parents (and ourselves) of blame: The implications of this verdict go way beyond Kaley, and even way beyond those thousands of current plaintiffs. This case—and one decided earlier this week in New Mexico—represent a legal and conceptual paradigm shift in how we consider social media.

Many people seem (or want) to believe that it's simply not possible to exercise restraint when it comes to smartphones and social media, or that parents bear any responsibility for controlling their kids' use and exposure. The shift showcases an embrace of powerlessness and corporate blame when it comes to tech habits, and a rejection of ideas like personal and parental responsibility. We've imbued these platforms with an almost magical status, while expecting their proprietors to perform superhuman feats of saving people from themselves.

In this case, Kaley testified to heavy use of social media from a young age. But she also suffered from school and home life problems and was exposed to domestic violence at a young age. To say that social media caused her problems is to rule out significant life stressors that can cause adolescents pain. It's to assume a causality that goes one way (heavy social media causes issues) when it could just as likely go the other way (girl turns to too much social media in the face of problems at home and school). It's to assign a massive and mystical power to smartphones and corporations, while utterly rejecting more mundane vectors or responsibility.

Her mother beat her, abused her, weighed her daily, called her fat, her sister tried to take her own life and her father abandoned her. Yet none of that apparently led to this poor girl's anxiety, depression and body dysmorphia, it was lip gloss review videos on youtube https://t.co/g8mBUwUym2

— Taylor Lorenz (@TaylorLorenz) March 25, 2026

Tort lawyers rejoice: This could be a gold rush for personal injury lawyers. Bad personal choices? Poor parenting? Material factors? Nah—must be the Reels!

"Cases like this will likely unleash a trial lawyer bonanza via a much broader wave of (mostly frivolous) lawsuits," predicts R Street Institute policy analyst Adam Thierer. "Every tort lawyer in America is probably thinking about ripping down their 'Been in a Crash?' billboards right now and replacing them with 'Addicted to the Internet?' signs."

The Wall Street Journal editorial board has a similar take. "Using a novel product liability theory to shake down companies won't help young people and isn't a good way to make law," it says.

Kaley's lawyers pushed their product liability theory, in part, by arguing that Meta and Google designed their products to be engaging and failed to design them in a way that would limit excessive use by teenagers. But using this as a standard for negligence is a very slippery slope. Social media companies are far from unique in trying to make products that people want to use or to showcase content that people want to consume. Nor are they unique in not actively working to prevent problematic consumption.

The addiction framework on display here could be used against food companies, streaming services, TV networks, game developers, porn producers, fitness programs, and a lot more.

Treating speech as "product": These cases may be good for tort lawyers, but they're a very bad omen for the open internet and free speech.

If social media platforms are legally liable for all the troubles of adolescence, it's not long before banning teens or severely limiting their use becomes the only sensible response. And that means checking IDs or requiring biometric identification for all users—the end of anonymity online.

If social media platforms are legally liable for any and all vague harms that someone could blame on their content, serious crackdowns on all sorts of material could become warranted. That means speech around controversial issues, diet and fitness, mental health topics, sexuality, and so much more will be suppressed.

And if social media platforms are a "product," rather than a venue for speech, we open the way for so much more government regulation of what can and cannot be said online.

"Many are cheering the [California and New Mexico] decisions, likening them to landmark lawsuits against Big Tobacco," notes Ari Cohn of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) on X. But "social media platforms and the information, ideas, and entertainment they connect people to aren't tangible items that inherently and invariably have physical impacts on the human body" and "the minute we start treating speech as if it were just another physical product is the minute we hand the government the power to decide what we can read, watch, and say."

As Will points out below, the president of the United States is in court RIGHT NOW trying to recast speech as a product in order to sidestep the strictures of the First Amendment and punish his perceived critics.

Beware this dangerous path! https://t.co/z53bJSDizs

— Nico Perrino (@NicoPerrino) March 25, 2026


Scenes from Cincinnati: An Ohio Congressional candidate has visually modeled her campaign website after OnlyFans, after her Republican primary opponent, Rep. Dave Joyce, reportedly criticized her for visiting a nude beach. Niki Frenchko's website features nude images discreetly covered in spots with campaign text, as well as the wacky mix of big government and limited government proposals that's come to characterize populist candidates—abolishing property taxes, protecting 2nd Amendment rights, and opposing AI data centers are all on the agenda. Frenchko told The Enquirer she was a "Thomas Massie-style Republican," and one of her campaign planks relates to releasing the Epstein files.


Quick Hits

  • "Iran has bombed U.S. bases across the Middle East in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli war, forcing many American troops to relocate to hotels and office spaces throughout the region," The New York Times reports. "So now much of the land-based military is, in essence, fighting the war while working remotely."
  •  Reason's Damon Root explains this week's Supreme Court decision in Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entertainment. Essentially, Sony argued that "if Cox Communications was aware of the fact that certain of its paying users were repeat offenders who routinely used the ISP to illegally download copyrighted materials, such as songs or movies, and Cox failed to cut off the internet access of those repeat offenders," then Cox was guilty of violating federal copyright law, Root explains. The Supreme Court (thankfully) rejected that argument.
  • Trump plans to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in May.
  • "Within 24 hours of being taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), former Afghan Special Forces soldier Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal was dead," writes Beth Bailey at Reason. "While ICE seeks to paint the father of six as a criminal, advocates working with Afghan refugees say his death was a preventable tragedy."
  • Against the smartphone theory of everything: "Today, billions of people look at their phones and see the whole world. But some theorists look at the whole world and see only phones," writes Derek Thompson at The Argument.

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.

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NEXT: Unanimous Supreme Court Says Internet Service Provider Not Liable for Internet Users’ Illegal Downloads

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

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  1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    ...anyone who's ever spent too much time on social media—or simply suffered any setbacks while simultaneously having social media accounts—can claim "addiction" and reasonably expect a big payout.

    REASON YOU OWE ME BIGTIME YOU WILL BE HEARING FROM MY ATTORNEYS

    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      The links were 4 minutes late! I was all c’mon maaan!

      1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

        I will join your class action suit.

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Do I have to beat my kids to "reasonably" expect a payout or just transition them? If I don't do either, can I still "reasonably" expect a payout?

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        Suffering transition regret? “The internet made me do it!”

        Haha. This should be fun.

    3. LIBtranslator   2 months ago

      Not so fast!
      APPEAL, v.t. In law, to put the dice into the box for another throw.

  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Many people seem (or want) to believe that it's simply not possible to exercise restraint when it comes to smartphones and social media, or that parents bear any responsibility for controlling their kids' use and exposure.

    Not to make this a generational rant, but do parents act differently than when I was a lad? No one rushed to hold me accountable as quickly as my folks.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      After you get done suing Reason, you can sue your parents.

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      The thing ENB doesnt realize is parents dont hover over their kids 24/7. Having tools to help parents is beneficial. It isnt 0 or 100. It is giving options.

      My daughter created an account at a friend's house. For IG. Was deleted once we found out. But ENBs take is I should have been at the friends house with her.

      The ruling is ridiculous. Should be a finding in the millions. But social media protection protocols are also ridiculous. Its a check the box that youre a voter system. And note. ENB has railed against any attempt at giving parents tools to try and do what she demands here. Because it might inconvenience her doom scrolling.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Should not be*

        By the way. Getting IG To delete fully is another issue. Same with FB. Let us delete accounts. Not just "hide" them.

    3. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      CNN loves the verdicts, apparently:

      https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/1-down-1000s-to-go-a-landmark-verdict-could-reshape-social-media/ar-AA1ZrO7c

    4. See.More   2 months ago

      . . . but do parents act differently than when I was a lad?

      Admittedly, I am inferring your age to be similarly advanced as my own, and thus I answer, fervently, in the affirmative.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        There's actually a different case similar to this one going around.

        The parents did all they could to not have her sign up for social media. She still did. When parents asked the companies to delete the profiles, companies refused. Profiles created outside the home.

        So even when parents sought to stop the social media interactions, companies refused to help.

  3. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

    .. say his death was a preventable tragedy

    Not true. Everyone dies.

    1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      Everyone already died in 2020.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Ha! I died in the 60s (global overpopulation famine), the 70s (nuclear winter), the 80s (acid rain), the 90s (second hand smoke), and the aughts (global climate warming change).

        1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

          And you voted six times in the last Chicago election?

          1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

            As a Democrat.

        2. mad.casual   2 months ago

          The "I survived [event] and all I got was this lousy T-shirt." business has really dropped off recently.

          1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

            I survived the BLM riots and all I looted was this lousy T-shirt.

      2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        You survived ww3 against NK???

  4. Ajsloss   2 months ago

    The addiction framework on display here could be used against food companies, streaming services, TV networks, game developers, porn producers, fitness programs, and a lot more.

    Take note, users of FanDuel and the like. Bet everything you have and if you win, great, you've doubled up. If you lose, sue them for tempting you and win everything back and then some.

    1. LIBtranslator   2 months ago

      Casino betting limits were invented to fleece idiots who double lost bets. Math cures addiction to wishful slinking.

  5. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    An Ohio Congressional candidate has visually modeled her campaign website after OnlyFans...

    Congresscreatures are whores and male whores anyway, so why not.

    Also, I'm going to need to see the offending material in order to properly condemn it.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Only once?

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Sometimes voters will vote for you willingly. Other times, you have to grab them by the pussy.

  6. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

    An Ohio Congressional candidate has visually modeled her campaign website after OnlyFans

    Another reason not to have chicks in politics.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      I don't want to hear about your campaign polices (or daddy issues) --get your ass up on that stage and dance!

      1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

        Shake that money maker!

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Step back from the dem candidates who was on that pay to perform sex site.

  7. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Iran has bombed U.S. bases across the Middle East in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli war, forcing many American troops to relocate to hotels and office spaces throughout the region...

    "Boots on the Ground Floor"

  8. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    A natural, if undesirable, human tendency: blaming others for everything unhappy.

    This was bad enough for 100,000 years and then the left embraced it, their intelligentsia formalized it, and the Democratic Party, following the lead of Marxists everywhere, weaponized it.

    Fuck them all.

    1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

      Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair!

      I coined that!

  9. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Trump plans to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in May.

    I look forward to the words of praise for that ChiCom.

  10. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Many people seem (or want) to believe that it's simply not possible to exercise restraint when it comes to smartphones and social media, or that parents bear any responsibility for controlling their kids' use and exposure. The shift showcases an embrace of powerlessness and corporate blame when it comes to tech habits, and a rejection of ideas like personal and parental responsibility.'

    Why else have "democracy"? Also identity politics, class warfare, and protected classes.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      ""and a rejection of ideas like personal and parental responsibility""

      Society made me do it is making a comeback.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        EISTAU flows much better as an acronym for the 21st century.

        Plus, it leaves options for who to blame.

  11. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Today, billions of people look at their phones and see the whole world. But some theorists look at the whole world and see only phones...

    Phones that might blow their dicks off if the Mossad so decide.

  12. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    "Cases like this will likely unleash a trial lawyer bonanza via a much broader wave of (mostly frivolous) lawsuits," predicts R Street Institute policy analyst Adam Thierer. "Every tort lawyer in America is probably thinking about ripping down their 'Been in a Crash?' billboards right now and replacing them with 'Addicted to the Internet?' signs."

    And I am not surprised at all that the FaceBook suit originated and succeeded in New Mexico. Albuquerque is the national capitol of ambulance-chasing lawyers with law suit billboards on every corner. Saul Goodman was not fiction.

  13. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'And if social media platforms are a "product," rather than a venue for speech, we open the way for so much more government regulation of what can and cannot be said online.'

    What do you want? Stupid free speech that never did anyone any good, or recognition of your victimhood status and financial compensation (private or government)?

  14. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    '"Iran has bombed U.S. bases across the Middle East in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli war, forcing many American troops to relocate to hotels and office spaces throughout the region," The New York Times reports.'

    I thought the Times has reported that we lost that war, more than once. And will certainly lose it again next week.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      And, because Strait of Hormuz, the generators in Palestine are within 24 hours of running out of fuel again and Ukraine might not defeat Russia again this year.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Still all Trumps's fault?

  15. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Fraud all the way down.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/why-kathy-hochul-ny-dems-fear-questions-about-medicaid-fraud/ar-AA1ZfGfM

    Gov. Kathy Hochul denounces the federal probes of New York’s Medicaid outlays as politically motivated, but Empire Center health expert Bill Hammond lays out state Democrats’ political motives for squelching any investigation.

    “The governor and other top state officials rely heavily on political support — and campaign donations — from Medicaid-funded health-care interests,” notes Hammond.

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      The dem solution post covid in their cities seems to have been allow massive fraud.

  16. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Scenes from NYC:

    https://hotair.com/john-s-2/2026/03/25/mamdani-uh-never-mind-that-property-tax-hike-n3813235

    Suddenly, all of the would-be socialists who voted this guy into office to raise taxes on other people realized the money for all of his big plans wasn't going to come from "the rich," it was gong to come from them. And just like that, they decided it was a terrible idea. The backlash was so fierce that Mamdani has now all but abandoned his threat.

    1. HorseConch   2 months ago

      Whatever they think of "the rich", most of them have more money because they're better with money. Part of being good with money means avoiding government-given ass fuckings when possible.

  17. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    We only pay them 2 grand and none of the other stuff...those darn racist, xenophobic Swedes!

    https://usnewsbreak.com/sweden-pays-migrants-31000-to-leave/

    Sweden offers up to $31,000 per adult for migrants to voluntarily leave the country starting January 2026

    Government moves to abolish permanent residence permits for refugees, pushing temporary status or citizenship instead

    New labor reforms impose median wage requirements and fines exceeding $10,000 for hiring illegal workers

    Human Rights Watch reports families torn apart as young adults lose permits upon turning 18

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Too many food trucks?

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Fly from america to Sweden. Get 1500.
      Fly from Sweden to ? Get 31000

      When did migrating illegally become a career.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Does Trump have to get Congressional approval to refuse to pay 1500 for people to fly to Sweden unless Sweden reduces it's payouts reciprocally or would that be an illegal tariff... which is an illegal tax... which is suddenly OK if Congress approves it for equal distribution to everyone domestically?

        Only minorly interested, because everybody knows that the real barrier to American prosperity and trade dominance is The Jones Act. Everything else is just doodles in the margins.

      2. Dillinger   2 months ago

        when raping Swedish chicks became exponentially more popular than just ogling them

  18. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

    Does enb always talk about porn because she knows she's too ugly to make money in it?

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      There is at least one incel here that would sign up. Do some weird shit with H02 and turducken. Enb could make some money.

    2. Zeb   2 months ago

      I wouldn't say ugly. And all depends on what she's willing to do.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        ^

  19. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Another activist judge slapped down

    https://redstate.com/smoosieq/2026/03/25/eighth-circuit-blows-open-federal-power-to-detain-migrants-not-just-at-the-border-n2200620

    After an immigration judge denied his request for a bond hearing, Avila filed a habeas petition seeking release or a hearing under § 1226(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The district court granted Avila's requested relief, concluding that § 1225(b)(2)(A)’s mandatory detention provision did not apply because Avila was not actively “seeking admission” and because applying it to interior arrests would conflict with § 1226(c). The district court ordered the government to release him or provide a bond hearing, after which Avila was released on bond, and the government appealed.

    The 8th Circuit reversed the district court's decision, holding that any noncitizen present in the United States without having been lawfully admitted is subject to mandatory detention without bond under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(2)(A).

    The decision closely examines the statutory language and ultimately hinges on whether an “applicant for admission” is also an alien who is “seeking admission.” As the court explains:

    If the phrases are equivalent, then, generally, any “alien present in the United States who has not been admitted” “shall be detained.” 2 Id. §1225(a)(1), (b)(2)(A). On the other hand, if the phrases are not equivalent, then an alien is only subject to detention under §1225(b)(2)(A) if he or she is present in the country without being admitted and also engages in a separate act of “seeking admission,” whatever that may be.

    Ultimately, the court reaches the same conclusion as the 5th Circuit recently reached in Buenrostro-Mendez v. Bondi, which adopted the same broad interpretation of the statutory provisions, rejecting the distinction between migrants stopped at the border and those arrested in the interior. Under this emerging framework, what matters is not where a migrant is encountered, but whether they were ever lawfully admitted at all, and this is a shift that dramatically expands the reach of mandatory detention nationwide.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      But laws are racist!

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Dammit. Right after you. But added Crows response.

  20. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    Poor damonsullum.

    Damon, did you miss this yesterday? Wasn't part of your story today. Sullum, remember those 400 judges you praised and called trump stating they were wrong was a crisis? The judges were wrong.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/25/mandatory-detention-ruling-8th-circuit-00844386

    This is the 2nd appeals court to state clearly that yes, illegals can be detained, no they dont require bail.

    Meanwhile democrats keep saying the quiet part out loud.

    Bill Melugin
    @BillMelugin_
    Rep. Jason Crow (D-CO) live on
    @FoxNews
    w/
    @WillCainShow
    explaining why he opposes the DHS deal the GOP is offering (fund all DHS except ICE ERO).

    “It would still keep mechanisms in place that would allow them to deport people,” Crow said.

    “That’s their job!” Will replied.

    Fu man sarc, remember when you tried claiming dems just wanted a clean bill? Yeah they voted against it.

  21. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Scenes from AOC:

    “using her campaign contributions for what appears to be an expense for personal use violates federal campaign finance laws.”

    https://pjnewsletter.com/aoc-campaign-funds-service/

    AOC Spent Nearly $19K In Campaign Funds On Ketamine-Therapy Psychiatrist, Records Show

    From ‘Breitbart’:

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) tapped nearly $19,000 from her campaign coffers last year to pay for a psychiatrist who specializes in ketamine therapy – a powerful drug that puts patients in a hallucinogenic state to treat disorders like trauma and depression…

    AOC’s campaign “paid Boyle $11,550 in March 2025, another $2,800 in May, and $4,375 in October for a total of $18,725, Federal Election Commission records show” according to the Post. The Post reported the expenses were marked as “leadership training and consulting.”

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      When Eat the Rich turns into eat yourself.

    2. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      34 felonies!

  22. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    Planned Parenthood has to pay fines for employing in a separate but equal manner.

    https://thefederalist.com/2026/03/25/planned-parenthood-illinois-to-pay-500k-after-investigation-for-segregating-employees-by-race/

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      I hate to have to broach gauche ideas and use coarse language like "swinging dicks" up when talking about litigation, but when we say "segregating employees by race", we mean keeping whole, intact employees in separate roles and facilities by race and not chopping up only or predominantly black clumps of cells, right?

  23. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    The thing that never happened happened again. And an election judge helped it happen.

    https://alphanews.org/election-judge-pleads-guilty-to-allowing-unregistered-voters-to-cast-ballots/

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      >>judge-pleads-guilty

      a ray of sunshine on an otherwise cloudy day

    2. See.More   2 months ago

      But... but... there is nooooooo evidence of fraud!

      Or, so I'm told repeatedly.

  24. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    Sqrsly?

    https://patch.com/illinois/arlingtonheights/couple-used-nazi-symbols-feces-vandalize-republican-building-arlington?utm_content=illinois&utm_campaign=blasts&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      My shit is speech; your speech is totally oppressive white patriarchal shit.

    2. Marshal   2 months ago

      The symbolism is too coherent to be Sqrsly, his mental illness would drive something far more elaborate. This is just pointless and classless, so it sounds more like Molly.

  25. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    A number (5 or 6 depending on sources) of scientists reportedly involved in government UFO research efforts have gone missing or been killed recently...

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/rocket-scientist-with-ties-to-missing-air-force-general-associated-with-ufos-disappeared-under-eerily-similar-circumstances/ar-AA1Z79wc

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Stop asking for another Men in Black movie.

      They'll have Colbert write it like they are LOTR.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        So, almost gay?

        1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

          Ambiguously gay.

    2. See.More   2 months ago

      Where is Fox Mulder when we need him?

  26. mad.casual   2 months ago

    can claim "addiction" and reasonably expect a big payout.

    If only there were a way to hold social media companies liable for legitimate breaches of contract/TOS, collusion, and legitimate harm and railroading performed against users, an educated populace might see them as appropriately liable for speech and behavior they do control and less liable for behavior and/or speech they don't actually control.

    Reason: Nah! Lets continue to obfuscate and demonize litigious trolls and deplorables!
    Fraudulent Institutional Racket Espousing its own hypocrisy (FIRE): Yeah! Let's do more of that!

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      are there Soros Insurers yet?

  27. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

    "Against the smartphone theory of everything: "Today, billions of people look at their phones and see the whole world. But some theorists look at the whole world and see only phones," writes Derek Thompson at The Argumen"

    Way to go quoting a 2 bit retard who read a 1 sentence tweet and built it out into an article.

    The tweet was: you laugh at the moth who thinks the lamp is the one, but you mistake the screen for the world

  28. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    He could work for reason.

    Steve Guest
    @SteveGuest
    Beyond Parody: Obama's Communist CIA Director John Brennan on MSNow runs cover for the world's leading sponsor of terror.

    @SymoneDSanders
    : "Iran, they are an authoritarian regime who’s known to lie."

    John Brennan: "Well, I tend to believe Iran more than I do Donald Trump, because he could not acknowledge the truth even when it—he's slapped in the face with it repeatedly."

    https://x.com/SteveGuest/status/2036464524878848211

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      "Work"?

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        He could enter the ChatGPT prompt to write articles for reason?

  29. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Fraud all the way down. Government programs meant to "help" people are just funnels of cash to criminals, because god help you if you dare to question if spending massive amounts of money actually helps anyone.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/autism-therapy-firm-paid-average-of-340-000-per-patient-is-getting-barred-from-medicaid/ar-AA1ZnTMY

    Indiana is barring one of the nation’s most expensive autism-therapy providers from billing the state’s Medicaid program two weeks after the company’s practices were detailed in a Wall Street Journal article, state officials said.

    The autism therapy provider, Piece by Piece Autism Centers, received the highest per-patient payments in the country in 2023—about $340,000 on average— according to a Journal analysis of Medicaid billing records.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Manager claims it should be ok, since we got away with this for years (the same logic used to defend illegal aliens who evade capture for 10 or 15 or 20 years)...

      -------

      “FSSA knew exactly what Piece by Piece, and other providers have billed and FSSA shared the same in public presentations,” Mitchell said in her note to employees. “And yet, only today—years later—is FSSA taking this punitive action,” she wrote.

      Barlow, the FSSA’s deputy chief of staff, said: “There were no guardrails under the prior administration, and they weren’t doing the job of oversight they should have been doing. But, we are.”

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Imagine a system where government asks companies how much should we pay you. Thats the system set up in all these cases.

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      "Government programs meant to "help" people are just funnels of cash to criminals, because god help you if you dare to question if spending massive amounts of money actually helps anyone."

      THERE ARE NO CRIMINALS!

  30. Minadin   2 months ago

    Why are we Tweet Quoting Taylor Lorenz? Was Matty Yglesias not available for comment?

    1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      Why is ENB using X at all? Mastodon is where all the action happens.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        classic virtue signal vs. jealous reality bipolarism

        like how jfree wants to date Hegseth

      2. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 months ago

        Maybe she has forgotten X is (formerly Twitter).

  31. JFree   2 months ago

    So now much of the land-based military is, in essence, fighting the war while working remotely.

    We're winning so much that Secy Hog's Breath is about to do 50 Burpees at his press briefing.

    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      Ooooh, sick burn.

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Dems cant insult either.

  32. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Scenes from Chicago:

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/chicago-mayor-unveils-city-vehicle-that-directly-attacks-ice-a-week-after-illegal-alien-allegedly-commits-murder/ar-AA1ZrJpB

    Only one week removed from the alleged murder of Loyola University Chicago student Sheridan Gorman by a Venezuelan illegal alien released under the Biden administration in 2023, Johnson announced the winners of the city's "You Name a Plow" contest on Wednesday.

    WTTW reports the top entry was the "Abolish ICE" snowplow

    “This name derives from our city’s legacy of standing up for justice, dignity, and the rights of all people, no matter where they come from,” he said at a press conference. “I’m going to continue to use every single tool that’s available to me to protect the residents of the city of Chicago."
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/chicago-mayor-who-said-we-cannot-jail-our-way-out-of-violent-crime-proves-we-can-as-student-allegedly-murdered-by-criminal-illegal/ar-AA1ZnEFL

    Chicago Mayor Johnson: "We cannot jail our way out of vioIent crime… it's racist"

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

      Can we deport our way?

    2. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 months ago

      How many entries were “Plowey McPlow Face”?

    3. mad.casual   2 months ago

      This name derives from our city’s legacy of standing up for justice, dignity, and the rights of all people, no matter where they come from,

      My favorite part of all this rhetoric in Chicago politics is how hollow it rings.

      Like people weren't around for lockdowns, nobody knows that Chicago declared itself a sanctuary city and then set up it's own immigrant gang databases, nobody remembers Laquan McDonald, and nobody has every known/seen/heard that Illinois has some of the highest taxes in the land, most levels of regulation and government enforcement in the land, and some of the most overpaid and ineffective public policies in the land.

      Nope. Illinois, just this campaign season, suddenly became a bastion of economically efficient government and freedom like Nevada, South Dakota, Switzerland, or New Zealand. Chicago, the city that people have been fleeing for a decade to the point that it's back down to the size it was 100 yrs. ago has really been a bastion of freedom. A shining city on the hill all along.

  33. LIBtranslator   2 months ago

    No political party has ever admitted error--read all the platforms and see for self. When China boycotted U.S. exports, Republicans feared losing the farm vote and policed the world for the Qing. Addiction--atrophy of natural dopamine production due to soaking a body with morphine--provided the sciency-sounding pretext, and the Holy War was on. But what if a black pugilist became world champion? Claim he was addicted to coke and ban it. What if cigarette prices fall? Invent a lie that hemp addicts dropped out of the market. What if the objective definition of addiction applies only to opiates and their imitations? Kill it, switch in a fake definition, and ban salt, insulin and cellphone apps.

    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

      ^ authentic frontier gibberish

    2. MT-Man   2 months ago

      chat gpt translation: No political party ever admits it was wrong—just read their platforms and decide for yourself. When China stopped buying U.S. exports, Republicans worried about losing support from farmers and responded by taking an active role abroad to protect trade interests tied to the Qing dynasty.

      The concept of “addiction”—defined here as the body’s reduced ability to produce natural dopamine after heavy exposure to substances like morphine—became a scientific-sounding justification for broader crackdowns. That framing helped fuel what the author describes as a kind of moral crusade.

      From there, the argument suggests a pattern: when something becomes socially or politically inconvenient, it gets labeled as dangerous or addictive. For example, if a Black boxer became world champion, he might be discredited by accusations of cocaine addiction. If cigarette prices dropped, a narrative might be created blaming hemp for market shifts. And if addiction is technically tied only to certain drugs like opiates, the definition could be stretched or redefined to justify banning unrelated things—even ordinary or beneficial ones.

  34. LIBtranslator   2 months ago

    Whutabout religious apps? Mystics get addicted to prohibitionist glossolalia on smutphones, then go about snitching, robbing, jailing and shooting their neighbors for looking at the wrong pictures, burning the wrong bush or thinking the wrong things. Can "we" ban all that too?

  35. mtrueman   2 months ago

    "forcing many American troops to relocate to hotels and office spaces "

    Taking refuge among human shields now? I doubt the Iranians will be deterred. I don't think adopting any of these Israeli practices is going to help much. If Americans have taken to massacring children in schools or patients in hospitals, expecting the Iranians to refrain from attacking troops quartered in civilian settings doesn't make much sense.

    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

      ^ authentic frontier gibberish (TY, BSPC)

    2. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      I don't recall US forces kidnapping people and placing them in their bases.

      1. mtrueman   2 months ago

        I don't recall the US removing troops from military bases and quartering them in civilian settings. I do recall repeated denunciations of the use of human shields not all that long ago.

        Either way it seems a desperate move. Within hours of America's massacring those school girls on Feb. 28, Iran launched an attack on UAE's iconic Burg Al Arab hotel. (No injuries, no deaths reported, but no US troops quartered there, either.)

        1. Marshal   2 months ago

          I do recall repeated denunciations of the use of human shields not all that long ago.

          Revealingly none by mtrueman though. He can't wait to criticize America but he can't bring himself to criticize Hamas even though their act was far more egregious. Similarly he doesn't criticize Iran for attacking these targets even though he did criticize Israel.

          As with all leftists he only criticizes his enemies, while allies are judged by a different standard.

          1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

            Just so you don't forget:

            mtrueman|8.30.17 @ 1:42PM|#
            "Spouting nonsense is an end in itself."

          2. mtrueman   2 months ago

            Hardly revealingly. I've never made a secret of my opposition to imperialism, colonialism and zionism. That includes taking any of their propaganda with a lot of skepticism. That works out well. Remember the tales of a vast Hamas headquarters deep beneath Gaza's principal hospital? Turns out it was only a 'node' consisting of an assault rifle found stashed behind an MRI machine. Go back and check if you doubt me. While you're at it, look up the location of Israel's Ministry of Defense. It should still be there, right in the heart of Tel Aviv, Israel's most populous city.

            1. Marshal   2 months ago

              Hardly revealingly. I've never made a secret of my opposition to imperialism, colonialism and zionism.

              Most people at least pretend to apply the same standards to all parties, we normally prefer people who pass those standards more often and more clearly than others. But at least you're forthright that you have chosen a side without any effort at consistent analysis.

              That includes taking any of their propaganda with a lot of skepticism.

              Yes, but there's no Hamas propaganda you don't support.

              Turns out it was only a 'node' consisting of an assault rifle found stashed behind an MRI machine.

              Oh look, there you go again.

              1. mtrueman   2 months ago

                "Most people at least pretend to apply the same standards to all parties,"

                That's a good reason to discount what most people say. When Biden tells you that Palestinians raped babies, chopped their heads off and put them in ovens, and those lies are endlessly repeated in the bourgeois press, that reason enough to dismiss it.

                ""Most people at least pretend to apply the same standards to all parties,"

                Because most people don't grasp the concept of asymmetric resistance to tyranny and, like you, are content to believe the lies from Biden, Trump, or any other authority figure.

                "Yes, but there's no Hamas propaganda you don't support. "

                Why do you say that? I don't like a lot of Hamas propaganda. It is too strident for my taste. And I'm not an Islamic Fundamentalist or conservative, either. Still, they seem to downplay this aspect of their struggle and emphasize their opposition to imperialism and their relegation to sub human status. Care to give your opinion on the propaganda of any of the participants?

                "Oh look, there you go again."

                As I say, go back and check if you doubt me. I understand if you prefer to believe Biden or Trump, but it doesn't hurt to do a little research on your own behalf.

                1. Marshal   2 months ago

                  Because most people don't grasp the concept of asymmetric resistance to tyranny

                  Most people oppose intentionally targeting and murdering children and other non-combatants. That's what sets you apart from decent people.

                  As I say, go back and check if you doubt me.

                  There's no need. The criticism wasn't a vast Hamas headquarters nor solely under their primary hospital. There are videos showing Hamas operations under hospitals and schools along with testimony from members of anti-Israel groups like Doctors Without Borders. You try to limit the claim to one specific time and place so you can wrongly dismiss it.

                  Imagine arguing an NFL team wasn't an explosive offense and your only evidence is that the third play of the second half in week 3 was a 2 yard run up the middle. We both know Hamas has operations in hospitals and schools. The difference is that you support Hamas doing this while you criticize America for it because you're on their side and aren't interested in judging each according to consistent standards.

                  1. mtrueman   2 months ago

                    "That's what sets you apart from decent people. "

                    If, by decent people, you mean genocide apologists like Biden, Trump and the bourgeois media, I agree. I am indecent enough to actually disapprove of murdering the innocent. That's one of the reasons I oppose the war, or whatever you feel comfortable calling it.

                    "The criticism wasn't a vast Hamas headquarters nor solely under their primary hospital."

                    No, the criticism is that US troops have abandoned their bases and are sheltering in civilian hotels among human shields, precisely what you have erroneously accused Hamas of doing. Had the US done as Hamas had done, they would have dug deep tunnels and sheltered there, separate from the civilians. . That's not the case.

                    "We both know Hamas has operations in hospitals and schools. "

                    Hamas is or was the government of Gaza, recognized and financed by the Netanyahu government. Not only did they have operations in hospitals and schools, they controlled distribution of food, water and energy, as well as running the police and militia. Bourgeois media repeatedly parroted the Biden/Netanyahu claims that beneath the principal hospital in Gaza lay the HQ of Hamas military operations. Once the hospital grounds were overrun by the IDF, the falsity of these claims became apparent.

    3. JFree   2 months ago

      This unfortunately isn't new news. It's been reported on since the end of the first weekend by the Middle East press. While the US/Western press has spent three weeks reporting bemusedly on why the Iranians are 'flailing wildly' (except NOT so wildly) at the Gulf states hitting hotels. After all - don't the Iranians know they've already lost?

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        I do love this belief by your ilk here that if yoi just give into Iranian threats they'll eventually stop threatening and terrorizing you. Sure its been 40 years with yearly examples of terrorism funded by Iran imparting costs on others, but why should we stop it!

        Same as the soros DAs who think just hugging and releasing violent homeless and minorities will somehow stop the violence and costs they impart.

        It is a really retarded thought process you have.

        1. mtrueman   2 months ago

          Like you give a shit about combating terrorism. You and your ilk have been purchasing drugs from bloodthirsty cartels for decades, or selling them the weapons they need to do their work. You think Netanyahu is any different? Funding and propping up groups like Hamas is not combating terrorism.

    4. Rick James   2 months ago

      Taking refuge among human shields now? I doubt the Iranians will be deterred.

      It's a good strategy.

  36. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

    "Mass deportations could cost Bay Area $67 billion a year; report shows loss of undocumented workers"
    [...]
    "Mass deportations could cost the Bay Area region $67 billion a year, according to a new report by the Bay Area Council.
    The new report shows just how much of a difference immigrants and undocumented workers make to our local economy..."
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/mass-deportations-could-cost-bay-area-67-billion-a-year-report-shows-loss-of-undocumented-workers/ar-AA1Zq8ga?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=69c54039fbef4e209fc047ca3d274296&ei=16

    Somone doesn't understand that there are costs and benefits. Or chooses not to in order to keep his cheap yard help.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Worried that they won't have anyone to wipe their asses.

      https://www.mynbc5.com/article/becca-balint-immigration-wipe-our-asses-remark/64998987

      "If we don't have avenues for people to come here legally, to work or to build a home here, I'm going to be really crude right now, we're not going to have anybody around to wipe our asses," Balint said in the May 28 town hall meeting.

      1. Outlaw Josey Wales   2 months ago

        Automated wiping robots - iBidet

    2. Rick James   2 months ago

      My favorite part about the Bay Area/Silicon Valley/Reason tech enthusiasts is, "We can solve a declining population issue with robots and tech! What birthrate crisis?" but you deport one Maryland Dad and suddenly the economy can't function.

  37. Rick James   2 months ago

    as well as the wacky mix of big government and limited government proposals that's come to characterize populist candidates—

    Pimps have to register with the government!

  38. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Absolving parents (and ourselves) of blame:

    first, you owe us all thousands for even commenting here.

    segunda, we throw parents in jail when the kids shoot up a school how are they not also negligent for arming their kids with access to the addiction?

  39. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>An Ohio Congressional candidate has visually modeled her campaign website after OnlyFans

    ya (D) is on a kick to find "hot" candidates ... considering they're all monsters on the inside it's difficult to see the hot anywhere

  40. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Reason's Damon Root explains
    >> writes Beth Bailey at Reason.

    previously and appropriately torn up ... so now I have less to make fun of

  41. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Today, billions of people look at their phones and see the whole world. But some theorists look at the whole world and see only phones

    are you experienced?

  42. Roberta   2 months ago

    The addiction framework on display here could be used against food companies, streaming services, TV networks, game developers, porn producers, fitness programs, and a lot more.

    And especially against drugs. The trouble is, that phantom, "addiction", has been so firmly ensconced in public imagination regarding drugs that it serves as a template. I don't think it's a good idea to argue that drugs are different somehow and try to draw a line there, because it won't hold much longer. Just let them fall into the net that "addiction" is a real thing that applies to everything, and soon people may say, this is all crazy thinking.

  43. Moderation4ever   2 months ago

    While I certainly agree with idea that people themselves and parents have a responsibility to control their behavior including the use of social media, I will not allow enablers off the hook. Media company have brought on some of their own trouble by creating product that are so highly addictive. Media companies could have backed off created products that met their needs for profit without be so all consuming for the user.

  44. Roberta   2 months ago

    "the minute we start treating speech as if it were just another physical product is the minute we hand the government the power to decide what we can read, watch, and say."

    But that's only because we handed governments the power over physical products. There's just as much justification for power over one as over the other.

  45. Roberta   2 months ago

    So yeah, why do we allow physical products, whether drugs or other things, to be treated differently in law from intangible ones?

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Dude, Reason struggles with "Congress shall make no law". For the last ~20 yrs. questions about "Doesn't the 14A conflict with the 1A?" were as likely to get you a "It's not enough to be passively not racist. We must be actively anti-racist." as not.

      Speech isn't a product. Printing a newspaper or newsletter for people to buy or subscribe to is. The same way owning or firing a gun, letting your neighbor practice shooting it with you isn't a product, but guns are products bought and sold.

      1. mtrueman   2 months ago

        "Speech isn't a product."

        Audience attention is the product. Whether you run a TV station, a newspaper or an internet content publisher, it's audience attention that is sold to advertisers.

        "Printing a newspaper or newsletter for people to buy or subscribe to is. "

        A common misconception. Newspapers are typically sold at a loss. The money is made by selling space to advertisers.

      2. Roberta   2 months ago

        That doesn't address the question of why law should treat them differently. Why elevate freedom to sell information over freedom to sell goods?

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