The New York Times Posts Pro-Rent-Control Cringe
The traditional case for rent control isn't made any more convincing by a Democratic Socialists of America dance number.
The traditional case for rent control isn't made any more convincing by a Democratic Socialists of America dance number.
Why? A better question was why they were ever involved in the first place.
"It's the taxpayers that are funding this."
"Governments realize that they are in an existential battle over who controls information."
A World After Liberalism details the rise of a young right that finds reactionary ideas relevant and appealing.
The president can't fix a problem he doesn't understand.
Plus: Questioning paranoia about smartphones and attention spans, new small business creation is thriving, and more...
Sex expert Helen Fisher says that careers and COVID have made singles less promiscuous and more serious about relationships.
Bad policy and unpredictable nature are sending food prices through the roof.
State food laws shouldn't apply to producers and consumers across state lines.
Squalls of flak suddenly surround one of the year’s most loveable movies.
James T. Bennett's libertarian critique argues that noncommercial radio can be detached from the state—and that it's better that way.
Last year may have been the year of the Cuomosexual, but 2021 rightly disabused people of the notion that New York's governor had their best interests at heart.
The 20th anniversary of the first film is an occasion to recall J.K. Rowling's inspiring political agenda.
Politics isn’t going away, so we can at least try to make it less bad.
Star Trek used to dare to say that things were getting better.
Do you, like many Americans, feel especially charitable this time of year? Enjoy helping those in need? Better buy a permit.
The true villains of Mike White's new show are two Gen Z college students practicing militant wokeness.
The TV adaptation of Isaac Asimov's classic trilogy is still fundamentally about the ways in which politics and objective truth inevitably clash.
"You know what else is used for nefarious activities?"
It's the strangest, most meta sequel of the year.
Plus: The pragmatic approach to omicron is emerging, lumber prices are skyrocketing again, and more...
In the face of state failure, neglect, and overt hostility, black Americans need the right to bear arms.
The state’s “reforms” have saddled merchants with oppressively expensive permitting demands.
Other teams beg for taxpayer handouts.
Penny Lane’s new film explores the gap between diehard fans and critical elites.
A new report says 83 percent of the world's population is less free today than it was in 2008, and the gap between the world's most and least free countries is growing.
It's the two Spider-Mans meme in $200 million movie form.
For the most part, the series' characters revere due process rights rather than seeing them as something to be trampled in pursuit of justice.
What the major professional sports leagues decide to do in the next few days will play a significant role in how Americans view the next stage of the pandemic.
How a generation was redpilled by a nerd power fantasy about defining yourself in the digital age
Amar explains how Roberts and Sotomayor messed up Marbury.
A new survey of single people confirms that we have more sexual choices than ever. Match.com's chief science adviser explains why such a libertarian outcome doesn't lead to libertinism.
Donating to the needy, in addition to being a generally nice thing to do, is a protected First Amendment activity.
Offending the powerful can be dangerous in an increasingly authoritarian world.
Can humans design products that assemble (and disassemble) themselves?
Either everybody gets to enjoy journalistic freedom, or it will turn into glorified public relations work for the powers-that-be.
The P.C. culture of the '80s and '90s didn't decline and fall. It just went underground. Now it's back.
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