Stossel: Hot Air on the Hill
Politicians use congressional hearings to score cheap points and bully productive people.
Politicians use congressional hearings to score cheap points and bully productive people.
Rand Paul takes on socialist arguments about Venezuela, Scandinavia, and fairness.
35 states have laws that let established businesses block new businesses. This hurts consumers.
Regulators hate Facebook's proposed "Libra” currency. They may kill it. But they can't kill Bitcoin so easily.
The Kentucky senator makes the case for less American military involvement abroad.
It's politically correct to say men and women are mentally the same, but Stossel lays out science that says otherwise.
Stossel's full interview with Tulsi Gabbard covering war, drugs, free healthcare, free college, the minimum wage, and more.
Tulsi Gabbard and Stossel discuss war, drug legalization, and government spending.
Glenn Beck says social media outlets are biased against conservatives.
Maybe the ocean is a place where we can experiment with new ways of living.
Don't believe news reports—we're healthier, richer, and safer than ever before.
Governments limit charter schools, even though charters often do better than government-run schools.
Entrepreneur Magatte Wade explains how regulations are keeping Africa poor.
President Trump has cut a lot of regulations—but increased some others.
Critics say organ sales would hurt the poor. In fact, it would save lives.
Presidential candidates promise expensive new programs. We added up the cost.
How Seattle’s $15 minimum wage killed entry-level jobs.
Farm groups get politicians to pass laws against secret filming on farms.
Florida man may lose home because he didn’t cut his grass.
Stossel reveals the good, the bad, and the ugly of the 2020 campaigns.
People acting in their own self-interest created modern prosperity, says Ayn Rand Institute's Yaron Brook.
Gene-editing technology will eventually allow parents to alter their future offspring's intelligence, height, eye color, and more. And that's worth celebrating.
Why mandated paid family leave is bad for business and bad for most women.
Alan Dershowitz: "The inmates run the asylum."
A new documentary reveals how stable currency leads to prosperity.
Police often accuse people of "sex trafficking." Usually, it’s simply prostitution.
A new wave of journalists, like Tim Pool, use "new media" to tell it like it is.
Contrary to what most of the media says, the poor are getting richer and income mobility is high.
How established businesses use government to limit competition.
People claim breakfast is the "most important meal of the day." But it's not.
Media personalities claim socialism didn't cause Venezuela's collapse, but it did. Here's how.
The editor of a journal that fell for a hoax defends his field.
Rep Ocasio-Cortez and her progressive followers think taxing the rich at 70% will bring in lots of tax money. It won't.
Sugar subsidies are welfare for the rich. They cost consumers billions a year.
San Francisco encourages homelessness by limiting housing, offering generous welfare, and failing to enforce basic laws.
Sports stadiums get billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies.
Stossel in the Classroom offers teachers free videos.
Shutdown teaches us that much of government is NOT essential.
Asians sue Harvard for discrimination in a case that may end college racial preferences.
New film The Creepy Line argues that tech giants sometimes silence conservatives and try to steer America left.
Tech companies are compiling incredibly detailed dossiers about you.
Socialist regimes use government brutality to enforce bad laws.
Amazon lobbies for government favors and bad regulations.
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