'I Don't Support Mandates From Government': John Stossel Interviews Libertarian Presidential Nominee Chase Oliver
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
Thanks to the lengthy approval process and special interests surrounding environmental review, it takes far longer to build anything in the United States than in other developed countries.
Ending U.S. aid would give Washington less leverage in the Middle East. That's why it's worth doing.
The agency's inscrutable approach to harm-reducing nicotine products sacrifices consumer choice and public health on the altar of youth protection.
Upcoming legislation would repeal parts of the 1873 law that could be used to target abortion, but the Comstock Act's reach is much more broad than that.
The Biden administration says its new guidance will make pandemic research safer. Critics say it suffers the same flaws as past, failed gain-of-function regulations.
Chevron deference, a doctrine created by the Court in 1984, gives federal agencies wide latitude in interpreting the meaning of various laws. But the justices may overturn that.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about the Selective Service.
The Selective Service should be abolished, not made more efficient and equitable.
Plus: The Federal Reserve considers an interest rate cut, its chairman considers persistently high inflation, housing pops up on the National Mall, and more...
Ending U.S. aid would give Washington less leverage in the Middle East. That's why it's worth doing.
Fifth in a series of guest-blogging posts.
Reasonable options include gradually raising the minimum retirement age, adjusting benefits to reflect longer life expectancies, and implementing fair means-testing to ensure benefits flow where they're actually needed.
At yesterday's congressional hearing, the former NIAID director played word games and shifted blame in an effort to dismiss credible claims that his agency funded work that caused the pandemic.
The Safer Supervision Act would create an off-ramp for those with good behavior to petition to have their supervised release sentences terminated early.
Plus: Cryogenic freezing, masking for robberies, Trump surrenders his guns, and more...
Why aren't politicians on both sides more worried than they seem to be?
Don’t unleash censors; restrain them more!
Lawmakers should be freed from "the dead hand of some guy from 1974," says former Congressional Budget Office director.
Judge Carlton Reeves ripped apart the legal doctrine in his latest decision on the matter.
Staff shortages and chronic corruption have plagued the Bureau of Prisons for years, exposing inmates to abuse and whistleblowers to retaliation.
The House Oversight and Education committees are investigating the sources of “malign influence” behind campus protests. They’re using tactics Republicans used to hate.
The legislation is largely a status quo bill that doesn't take up longstanding calls to reform air traffic control, airport funding, and more.
New bipartisan legislation would sunset Section 230 after next year.
Nominated stories include journalism on messy nutrition research, pickleball, government theft, homelessness, and more.
Total spending under Trump nearly doubled. New programs filled Washington with more bureaucrats.
With 54 out of 60 seats in Congress, President Nayib Bukele’s party holds significant influence over legislative decisions.
Instead of lobbying for age verification and youth social media bans, parents can simply restrict their kids' smartphone use.
The bill would allow the Education Department to effectively force colleges to suppress a wide range of protected speech.
"Today it is highly centralized, where a few people at the top control everything," the former five-term congressman tells Reason's Nick Gillespie.
The American Sunlight Project contends that researchers are being silenced by their critics.
Let's just call this what it is: another gimmick for Congress to escape its own budget limits and avoid having a conversation about tradeoffs.
Plus: Masking protesters, how Google Search got so bad, Columbia's anti-apartheid protests of the '80s, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors to steel man the case for the Jones Act, an antiquated law that regulates maritime commerce in U.S. waters.
House Speaker Mike Johnson worked with President Biden to push through a $95 billion foreign military aid package—most of which goes to the American military-industrial complex.
Banning companies for doing business with China is a bad path to start down.
"This bill would basically allow the government to institute a spy draft," warns head of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
We've seen this saga so many times before.
New language could make almost anybody with access to a WiFi router help the government snoop.
The little-known but outrageous practice allowed judges to enhance defendants' sentences using conduct a jury acquitted them of.
An interview with Consumer Choice Center Deputy Director Yaël Ossowski.
Plus: Time to ax NPR's funding, African migrants get mad at New York City, Gavin Newsom gets smart, and more...