'The Government Needed a Scapegoat': 75-Year-Old Man Charged With Opioid Conspiracy Cleared
Plus: FIRE sues to stop the Stop WOKE Act, processing times for skilled immigrants skyrocket, and more...
Plus: FIRE sues to stop the Stop WOKE Act, processing times for skilled immigrants skyrocket, and more...
at least through a preliminary injunction, even if the books include some moderately graphic descriptions.
The first government official has been removed by judicial order for participating in the January 6th "insurrection"
Clearly hostile, but was it threatening?
The FBI's long history of using informants and manufactured plots to prosecute extremists
"One of the things that the left and right have in common is an awareness that our government has essentially been co-opted by corporate power," says the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist.
The Eighth Circuit tries to rein in the criminalization of the intentional infliction of emotional distress tort.
The president's attack on the "extreme ideology" of "MAGA Republicans" elides the tension between majority rule and individual freedom.
Republicans are losing ground in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade.
Approximately 36 blocks around Times Square will now be deemed a "gun-free zone." What purpose is served by this?
Social media companies are eager to appease the government by suppressing disfavored speech.
An effort to ban sales of two books to minors ended with a Virginia judge saying that the state’s obscenity statute is “unconstitutional on its face."
Licensing authorities are penalizing Strong Towns founder Charles Marohn for referring to himself as a professional engineer while his license was briefly expired.
We already know what happens when governments try to impose prohibitions: messy, deadly black markets.
The Judge Rotenberg Center, which has been condemned by the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, is suing a small nonprofit for defamation after they published a survey critical of the school's practices.
When taxing authorities get more resources and power, they will find ways to make everyone pay more.
Plus: Vermont city repeals prostitution ordinance, political correctness revisited, and more...
The venerable champion of civil liberties is increasingly indistinguishable from myriad progressive advocacy groups.
A Tucson mother who briefly left two kids alone while she ran an errand won a temporary reprieve in court.
A new ordinance in Franklin will restrict evening and weekend protests and subject violators to misdemeanor charges.
Some candidates, like Arizona's Blake Masters, have quietly removed abortion restriction initiatives from their campaign websites.
Michael Jennings was arrested on obstruction charges, even after a neighbor who called police over "suspicious person" concerns told officers she had made a mistake.
Plus: California "Kid's Code" bill could mean face scans to visit websites, Michael Horn on reinventing schools, and more...
Plus: The editors field a listener question on abortion.
Perhaps Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone has the mark of a great story—everyone can find cause both to love it and to hate it.
In 1989, Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini called for the author and those involved in the book's publication to be put to death.
Virginia lawmakers passed a bill allowing parents to opt out of certain lessons, which was vetoed by then-Gov. Terry McAuliffe.
An Ohio judge ruled on Monday that Cleveland State University's use of "room scans," a popular method for preventing cheating during online exams, violates the Fourth Amendment.
This is a clear attempt by the administration to tamp down on opinions the adults don't like.
The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board determined this week that an applicant cannot have the exclusive rights to everybody's favorite curse word.
Plus: "Reparations" for the news industry, the disappearance of starter homes, and more...
The appellate court would leave the matter for the district court to decide in the first instance, subject to appellate review; Judge Matey dissented, arguing that the appellate court should have considered the issue directly.
"PM has made mistakes," tweeted Podcast Movement. "The pain caused by this one will always stick with us."
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