CBDCs Banned
Plus: Crime prevention, JFK assassination files, and more...
The arguments are not new. The willingness of an Administration to act on them are.
“I can’t remember another case where the question presented is as clear as this one is,” said Judge John C. Coughenour.
Not doing so could be harmful for just about everyone.
They are allied countries with which the U.S. has a trade deal (a deal negotiated by Trump, no less), but presidential emergency powers are nearly limitless.
New historical evidence on the ERA's invalidity.
Robert Roberson was sentenced to death based on outdated and largely discredited scientific evidence.
Like many of his other "Day 1" decrees, the order seems more concerned with scoring points in the culture war than advancing sensible policy.
The Fraternal Order of Police mistakenly thought that the president "supports our law enforcement officers" and "has our backs."
A thicket of red tape has made the island's rebuilding efforts painfully slow.
The dawn of a new golden age?
We have too much rule by decree by whoever currently holds the office of president and a pen.
Biden’s preemptive pardons and Trump’s blanket relief for Capitol rioters both set dangerous precedents.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about the validity of using emergency measures to restrict movement during the L.A. wildfires.
The president drew no distinction between people who merely entered the building and people who vandalized it or assaulted police officers.
The most important thing in any name is not what some official institution or a collection of old maps says. Spontaneous order tends to rule the day.
Children could be denied citizenship even if their parents are here completely legally.
Lawmakers across the country introduce bills to strengthen private property rights, crackdown on out-of-control regulators, and get the government out of micromanaging stairways.
Domestic deregulation will decrease the cost of living. Trade barriers will do the opposite.
Plus: Pardoning the Proud Boys, revoking birthright citizenship, Elon Musk's not-a-Nazi-salute, and more...
His last-minute acts of clemency invite Trump and future presidents to shield their underlings from the consequences of committing crimes in office.
Several of his announced actions are likely to be illegal, especially some related to immigration.
Plus: Fauci preemptively pardoned, hostages released, Inauguration Day, and more...
My latest article with Michael Stokes Paulsen is in print
Dan Epps and I discuss Royal Canin v. Wullschleger and TikTok v. Garland on the latest episode of Divided Argument
The popular video app restored service in the U.S. after President-elect Donald Trump promised to postpone a federal ban.
Riley's murder was an atrocity. But the law bearing her name is a grab bag of authoritarian policies that have little to do with her death.
In granting Mahmoud v. Taylor, the Supreme Court has agreed to consider this question.
Biden announced today that the Equal Rights Amendment is the "law of the land," but the Justice Department and the national archivist disagree.
With just hours to go before it is set to shut down, many senators and representatives are still posting on the app they claim is too dangerous for the rest of us to use.
"I cannot profess the kind of certainty I would like to have about the arguments and record before us," writes Justice Gorsuch.
A deeply mistaken decision on the way out of office.
Why should an unpopular president shape so much policy on his way out?
Californians are turning to private firefighting and security, but officialdom gets in the way.
The Justice Department temporarily suspended the program in November because of "significant risks" of constitutional violations.
In a federal lawsuit, artists say their nonfungible tokens should be treated like physical art.
The Supreme Court appears poised to uphold a ban on the app, but many creators aren't so sure.
I can't stand big government, but I think we need something. Michael Malice says I'm wrong.
It shouldn't take a disaster for the state to consider fixing the rules that make it so expensive to building housing there.
Millions of Americans are denied legal representation, and law schools are churning out lawyers who can’t meet society’s needs. It’s time for a two-track system.
Increasing mobility and remote work make taxes an important consideration in where to live.
The Golden State has many bad policies in desperate need of reform. It's not obvious they had more than a marginal effect on the still-burning fires in Los Angeles.
Plus: L.A.'s price gouging crackdown, more Rachel Maddow in your life, and more...
Ranked choice voting and nonpartisan primaries suffered a bad election cycle in 2024.
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