New State Department Rules Crack Down on 'Birth Tourism' Under National Security Guise
The Trump administration is trying to make it harder for pregnant women to enter the country as tourists since they might give birth while here.
The Trump administration is trying to make it harder for pregnant women to enter the country as tourists since they might give birth while here.
Sending Omar Ameen back to Iraq will likely result in his execution, and the case against him doesn't make sense. The Trump administration is fighting to do it anyway.
It will be published by Oxford University Press in April.
Plus: trade vote today, woman sues DEA for seizing cash belonging to her dad with dementia, and more...
Militarized borders and military intervention are two sides of the same coin.
And they're just as wrong and dangerous this time around.
Canada and Australia are scooping up the talent that America is spurning.
How the Punjabi diaspora rescued Canada's national sport
A new dump of emails shed light on Miller's agenda and motivations
Congress and President Trump should use 2020 to craft more sane policies on trade, immigration, and the budget.
The Democratic presidential candidate wants to keep prostitution customers criminalized while "decriminalizing sex work on the part of the seller."
The new memoir Self-Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race is a powerful personal statement and national call to arms.
Adultery and prostitution outweigh spousal and child abuse in USCIS guidelines, but ultimately the call is made on a case-by-case basis.
The human cost of border enforcement
If a case warrants an expedited appeal, the Justice Department should act like it.
The National Museum of American History display recognizes the throngs who helped enable America's westward expansion.
Some students even left legitimate universities to enroll. Now they're being deported.
The reform could help formalize immigrant farm labor.
The Brexit architect explains what the media got wrong about Brexit, the rise of "Bannonism and Bernie-ism," and what went wrong in Venezuela.
Judge Bybee's concurrence in decision rejecting challenge to "public charge" rule raises concerns about Congress's abdication of responsibility on immigration policy.
One of Brexit's architects says leaving the EU is a victory for free trade and decentralization and warns that a Corbyn victory will destroy the U.K.'s future.
The case for offering victims of our foreign policy a chance to get out and start over.
Trump said mountain climbers couldn't scale his wall. All it takes is a ladder and some rope.
"It's all over Facebook."
Since FOSTA passed in 2018, "sex workers have faced increased violence" and "have been forced onto the streets," the California congressman says.
Also: This is your last chance to ask The Reason Roundtable co-hosts anything!
A part of the law intended to hold suspected terrorists for deportation is being twisted to justify indefinite detention.
Assessment of motives is often an essential tool for protecting our constitutional rights.
The George Mason economist partnered with Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal's Zach Weinersmith to offer a thoughtful look at immigration policy in comic form.
Scott Warren of No More Deaths was acquitted on two charges of harboring illegal immigrants.
Rural communities continue to resist their legislatures’ attempts to enact gun control by declaring themselves “Second Amendment sanctuaries.”
Plus: how Hyperloop could reshape the Midwest, crowdfunding social media, the billionaires behind Democratic candidates, and more...
"There is no room in mainstream conservatism or at YAF for holocaust deniers, white nationalists, street brawlers, or racists."
I took part in panels on these topics at the recent Federalist Society National Lawyers Convention
Immigration is just like free trade.
Plus: New York's rent control expansion has predictable effects, people are boycotting Uber again, and violence continues in Hong Kong.
The Trump administration's justification for rescinding DACA relies heavily on the claim that the program is illegal. But it's not.
A happy occasion - but also one with lessons that remain urgent today.
The constitutional showdown over federalism and immigration approaches SCOTUS.
The latest in a long line of court decisions ruling against Trump's efforts to pressure sanctuary cities into helping deport undocumented immigrants features an opinion by two conservative Republican judicial appointees.
Prof. Brian Frye of the University of Kentucky Law School interviewed me on this subject, as part of his series of "Ipse Dixit" podcasts.
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