Superman Is About the Anti-War Vibe Shift
Supervillains used to be foreign enemies. Now the villain is a defense contractor who wants to start a regime change war.
Supervillains used to be foreign enemies. Now the villain is a defense contractor who wants to start a regime change war.
AI cheating is often a crutch for students ill-equipped to attend a four-year university.
Yale’s Jacob Hacker and Sesame’s David Goldhill debate a government-run health insurance plan.
The success of "contingency management" belies the notion that addiction is an uncontrollable disease caused by a drug's impact on dopamine levels.
Immigrant detainees transferred thousands of miles from where they were first arrested face unique challenges in immigration court.
The ruling upholds protections afforded to officers of the "quasi legislative or quasi judicial agencies" created by Congress.
Recent protests at MLS matches and the ensuing bans for some fans have put the league in a delicate position, balancing tolerance and enforcement.
What is the relationship between Trump's tariffs and the rest of the economy?
The notion that NPR can somehow become unbiased is about as believable as the IRS sending you a fruit basket to commend you for filing your taxes.
Plus: Throuple reproduction, weight-loss drug competition, and more...
You have rights to your property, not to control others.
Collections represented a surge in imports trying to beat higher rates—with a slump to follow.
The alleged incident goes to the heart of the objections raised by critics who worry about Bove's respect for the rule of law.
One immigration judge referred to an ICE attorney as merely “Department” during a hearing.
The FDA blocked a similar successful treatment for mitochondrial disease a quarter of century ago.
Between 2006 and 2013, gun violence increased by 150 percent in the city when juvenile curfews were in effect.
The lawsuit says attorneys have been repeatedly turned away from the detention camp and had virtual meetings mysteriously canceled.
Partisan pundits are misreading statistical estimates and misrepresenting the science to suggest that Trump's Medicaid cuts will kill 100,000 people. That claim doesn’t survive scrutiny.
Government policy bears much of the blame for the use of high-fructose corn syrup, and Trump's policies will not change that.
This was not an attack on the free press.
A new lawsuit alleges that the city's Mandatory Housing Affordability program unconstitutionally penalizes property owners just for trying to build housing.
The president has spent six months promising to make everything more expensive, and polls show that Americans have noticed.
Brazil’s judiciary has abandoned neutrality, with sweeping crackdowns on speech and political rivals. A U.S. tariff response signals the crisis has gone international.
"We have no criticism of the U.S. government—on the contrary, we are truly thankful. However, we are deeply afraid of the possibility of being returned to Afghanistan."
The Senate just voted to cut off the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. What comes next?
Plus: Jerome Powell on Trump's kill list, conservatives embrace speech restrictions, homeschooling heat, and more...
Green energy is promising. But subsidies distort the tax code, misallocate capital, and favor companies already in the game.
Censorship tends to blow up in the faces of the censors.
Edinburgh was the Scottish economist's home and a place for anyone interested in a rich, varied, and liberal life.
The bill, which could pass the Senate on Wednesday, would trim 13 cents from every $100 of federal spending.
ICE wants to access confidential IRS data to locate tax-paying undocumented immigrants and boost detention numbers.
Despite passing two bills to reduce barriers to enjoying a drink, the Granite State is making it harder for brewpubs to grow.
Numerous accounts of lack of showers, overflowing toilets, and inability to meet with lawyers are emerging from the detention center in the middle of the Everglades.
The law transferred wealth from workers who lost their jobs to those who didn’t.
If the president truly cares about cutting waste, he should not be paying to set taxpayer dollars on fire.
In response to a Second Amendment lawsuit, the government says the restriction "serves legitimate objectives" and "only modestly burdens" the right to arms.
The Florida Immigrant Coalition's new billboards were restored less than a day after being taken down, but why were they removed in the first place?
Like sex trafficking panic more broadly, the Epstein files are a useful political tool—as long as they remain hidden.
Historian John Lisle uncovers how Cold War paranoia, LSD, and unchecked power led the CIA to fund torture, deception, and mind control experiments on unwitting Americans.
Immigrants who arrive illegally in the U.S. may be detained for months or years as they await a resolution to their immigration cases.
According to one analyst, the U.S. would need between 42,000 and 250,000 more acres growing tomatoes to replace Mexican imports.
Plus: Zohran Mamdani's brilliant plan, Google monopoly claims fall flat, and more...
Trump promised to target violent criminals. He lost support when he went after harmless immigrants.
Most of Big E spends little on cleaning rivers or parks and far more on filing lawsuits.
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