The Preacher and the President: Weekend TV Draws from History, Comic Books
LBJ and DC (comics) offer very divergent entertainment options.
LBJ and DC (comics) offer very divergent entertainment options.
Reforms would give people more protections from asset forfeiture abuse.
Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) introduces the "Preventing Tragedies Between Police and Communities Act."
President Obama's foreign policy advisor admits he lied to Congress and the public about Iranian nuclear negotiations.
Headed to House floor for eventual debate and vote.
Stripping foreign officials of immunity from lawsuits works both ways.
Changes-which the Reason Foundation helped facilitate-will help keep system financially viable.
Download malware? The feds may use that as an excuse to infiltrate your computer as well.
Copy of Senate report 'mistakenly' gets destroyed as government successfully resists release.
Let consumers, advocates, and courts decide.
"Our report should never have been read as an exoneration of Saudi Arabia," says former Reagan administration Secretary of the Navy John Lehman.
The Kentucky Congressman on Trump, House of Cards, and the plot to kick out Boehner.
Meanwhile: The hunt is on to find somebody to blame for Prince's death.
Robot overlords coming to a government agency near you.
New law ends occupational license-mandated monopoly on casket sales.
A judge makes unfounded accusations against a dead man whose life was stolen to save the state from "automatic financial liability."
Calls for federal reform to stop law enforcement agencies from bypassing state restrictions.
Those who call for aid shouldn't ignore where the territory's money actually went.
If he loses, he'll only have himself to blame.
One big step forward; two temporary steps back.
New study quantifies the damage to economic growth that the accumulation of regulations causes
New study finds that U.S. economy is $4 trillion smaller due to over-regulation
Current federal law treats online communications stored after 180 days as abandoned.
Two libertarian scholars go toe-to-toe on Obama's immigration executive order
Presidents come and go, but the national security bureaucracy never leaves.
Obama's action is good policy, bad law, and terrible precedent.
The immigration laws whose enforcement the president is restricting are themselves unconstitutional.
It's past time to have the "Where is this relationship going?" conversation.
Does the Sanders campaign respect the First Amendment rights to satire and parody?
Reports of negligent civilian authorities in military sexual-assault cases were overblown or unverifiable.
The Supreme Court is hearing oral arguments today in the backdrop of a deeply divided country
If the program is so good, shouldn't government workers be included, too?
Two recent examples illustrate deep and broad problems.
As of this week, religious accommodation doesn't require a prison to let an inmate wear a pirate costume.
Sen. Wyden threatens a filibuster to block it.
Even when cases are overturned over prosecutor misconduct, judges often refuse to name names.
Time to show it off in Reason's first (and probably last) ink contest.
Randy Barnett of Georgetown University Law Center says we need to look beyond qualifications to judicial philosophy.
How public unions are driving another economic bubble.
It wouldn't make a 'back door'-it would make a gigantic crater.
Election year posturing and new Supreme Court nominee fight push it down the agenda.