Federal Judge to Biden Administration: Stop Telling Social Media Sites To Limit Free Speech
Plus: Teaching A.I. about the Fourth of July, and more...
Plus: Teaching A.I. about the Fourth of July, and more...
Plus: Fewer cops, less crime; free beer; and more....
The environmentalist and anti-vaccine activist talks about his presidential run and whether he'd jail climate change skeptics.
At a minimum, the national debt should be smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver.
After losing more than $100 million in a single year, Yellow Corporation got a $700 million pandemic assistance loan from the government. It has only paid $230 on the principal.
A new audit says one out of every $6 distributed by the Small Business Administration during the pandemic was stolen.
A case that began with a bang ends with a whimper. The issue of whether the CDC has the power to impose mask mandates remains unresolved.
Nearly two years after most children returned to the classroom, educational losses continue to grow.
Spiked's leading polemicist defends J.K. Rowling, Brexit, and Enlightenment values of free speech and pluralism.
Confirmation of Wuhan scientists as "patients zero" makes the lab leak theory look likely—and the misinformation police look like fools.
Plus: Grand jury indicts Jack Teixeira, Congress pursues A.I. regulation, and more...
Plus: Court using anti-pornography software to track a criminal defendant, $25 million verdict against Starbucks over fired employee, and more...
A new Associated Press analysis of government data suggests 10 percent of all COVID aid was lost to fraud or theft. That figure will likely grow.
A new study has found that the more schools kept kids online, the worse their pass rates on state standardized tests were.
A new review suggests modest incentives appear to have positive effects on vaccine uptake.
The Rubin Report host makes the case for the Florida governor, who courageously defied lockdowns but is quick to use the state to punish corporations he doesn't like.
Even taking all the money from every billionaire wouldn't cover our coming bankruptcy.
Whether the putative target is the "biomedical security state," wokeness, "Big Tech censors," or Chinese Communists, the presidential candidate’s grandstanding poses a clear threat to individual rights.
Memorial Day ushers in the unofficial start of summer. But if your pool is missing lifeguards, issues with immigration may be the culprit.
The number surged during the pandemic.
The U.S. tax system is extremely progressive, even compared to European countries—whose governments rely on taxing the middle class.
Sometimes he calls for freedom, and sometimes he preaches something darker.
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch highlights a vital lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Since March 2020, we may have experienced the greatest intrusions on civil liberties in the peacetime history of this country," Gorsuch wrote. That might be an exaggeration, but it isn't far off.
The former president reminds us that claiming unbridled executive power is a bipartisan tendency.
The lawsuit claims that the pause has cost taxpayers "$160 billion and counting."
The longer we wait to address our debt, the more painful it will be.
Title 42 expulsions caused great harm for very little benefit. Biden plans to replace them with a combination of policies, some good and some very bad.
"If you don't trust central authority, then you should see this immediately as something that is very problematic," says the Florida governor.
Here are three people whose record on COVID-19 shouldn't be forgotten.
Under Walensky, the CDC's voluntary guidance was anything but.
It's been over for most Americans for a long time already.
The teachers union head honcho is trying to engage in some astonishing revisionism, claiming she actually wasn't opposed to school reopening.
Recent comments by former COVID-19 adviser Anthony Fauci contradict what public health officials told us during the pandemic.
A recent study finds that human challenge trials are largely safe.
The last vestiges of the Biden administration's pandemic mandates are disappearing on May 11.
Plus: A listener question scrutinizing current attitudes toward executive power
The enemy of your enemy is not your friend; he's a guy who might want to throw you in jail.
In 2019, discretionary spending was $1.338 trillion—or some $320 billion less than what Republicans want that side of the budget to be.
Fauci says public officials should have listened to other advisers and made better decisions. That's true! It's also incredibly frustrating.
Is this what equity looks like?
There is no demonstrable link between alcohol delivery laws and our heightened pandemic drinking.
The main driver behind the reduction is inflation—inflation that politicians created with their irresponsible spending.
We owe this achievement to a combination of Covid vaccines and Biden Administration policy changes. But much more can be done.
A panel upheld a preliminary objection barring the Air force from requiring religious objectors to get Covid-19 vaccines, and a majority of the court's judges refused to vacate that decision as moot.
Overall human freedom peaked in 2007, according to the Cato Institute, and governments' COVID response merely exacerbated the trend toward a radically less-free planet.
A responsible political class would significantly reform the organization. Instead, they will likely continue to give it more power.
Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.
This modal will close in 10