German Police Investigate Roger Waters Over Concert Wardrobe
Laws against displaying Nazi-esque iconography are well-intended, but they pose a threat to free speech and the principles of a free society.
Laws against displaying Nazi-esque iconography are well-intended, but they pose a threat to free speech and the principles of a free society.
Freedom's Dominion argues Southern history was animated by "racialized radical anti-statism." The case is lacking.
Expect the very foundations of the internet to come under attack from politicians and the mainstream media.
The New York Times asked that their names, and information related to the bail hearing, be released.
"[W]e find no error by the trial court in finding that Father had mentally abused N. The circuit court concluded that N. was 'frightened,' 'scared,' and 'fearful' of his Father's anger and his Father's refusal to accept his sexual orientation."
A new report calls for policy makers to take action when none is required.
A case stemming from a "Holocaust revisionist's" expulsion from a conference on "Mennonites and the Holocaust."
violates the First Amendment, holds the Louisiana Court of Appeal.
The student had “posted a screenshot of a friend with a cosmetic mud mask on her face with the caption ‘when he says he’s only into black girls’ on her Instagram account.”
Plus: A new lawsuit in Montana over the state's TikTok ban, the economic realities of online content creation, the rights of private companies, and more...
Plus: Americans are increasingly changing religions, court pauses rejection of "free" preventative care mandate, and more...
Anger about social media censorship should be directed at repressive governments, not the companies they threaten.
Democrats spent tens of millions of dollars last year's midterms meddling in Republican primaries. Republicans may now be borrowing a page from their playbook.
Why the businessman launched a long shot campaign for the presidency.
A demand letter states that the Uvalde school district is infringing on Adam Martinez's First Amendment right to criticize the government.
He either doesn't understand or won't admit why this violates the First Amendment.
UPDATE: Added response from PEN.
Plus: Flight attendants report dad as human trafficker, the suburbs are thriving, and more...
The partisan and constitutional dangers of letting the IRS police speech are simply too great.
"When the government picks and chooses among religions," the lawsuit reads, "religious liberty is threatened for all."
Uncowed, the protest organizer is suing.
Plus: Senate Judiciary Committee considers the EARN IT Act, the FTC has A.I. in its crosshairs, and more...
The Chinese app has become a magnet for every possible cultural concern.
A decade ago, online startups seemed poised to vanquish legacy media. That didn't happen.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of Jacob Siegel's broadside against the "counter-disinformation complex" in Tablet magazine.
The enemy of your enemy is not your friend; he's a guy who might want to throw you in jail.
Plus: Missouri attempts to ban gender transition treatments for adults, another bad social media bill hits Congress, and more...
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