Chase Oliver: What Does the Libertarian Presidential Candidate Really Believe?
The L.P. presidential candidate clarifies his views amid criticisms that he is too "woke."
The L.P. presidential candidate clarifies his views amid criticisms that he is too "woke."
Matthew Franck on "Choosing Not to Choose" in November
The former and possibly future president hopes voters will overlook his incoherence.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for voting advice and commiseration in a predominantly democratic state.
Plus: Piña coladas, doing business in Hong Kong, edibles at the LNC, and more...
"It was the weirdest room I've ever been in," one Libertarian Party delegate tells Reason
After a highly contentious convention, Oliver won the nomination on the seventh ballot.
Ulbricht is serving two life sentences plus 40 years in connection with the Silk Road, an online marketplace he founded and operated where users could buy and sell illegal substances.
Let there be no confusion: The Libertarian Party overwhelmingly rejects Trump.
He says the two ideas "are not in tension with one another." He's wrong.
This week the judge presiding over Trump's trial ruled that jurors do not have to agree on any particular legal theory.
The close Trump ally tried to argue that more aggressive U.S. policy in the Middle East would help the U.S. get out of the Middle East.
A party in disarray squabbles over its future in the shadow of the former president.
Since he favors aggressive drug law enforcement, severe penalties, and impunity for abusive police officers, he may have trouble persuading black voters that he is on their side.
Plus: Who are the editors' favorite vice presidents of all time?
Despite both presidential candidates touting protectionist trade policy, tariffs do little to address the underlying factors that make it difficult for U.S. manufacturers to compete in the global marketplace.
Where are the fact-checkers?
To convert a hush payment into 34 felonies, prosecutors are relying on a chain of assumptions with several weak links.
Are Americans prepared to spend a trillion dollars to deport undocumented migrants?
Rescheduling does not resolve the conflict between federal pot prohibition and state rejection of that policy.
It looks like Attorney General Merrick Garland overrode the agency's recalcitrant drug warriors in deciding to reclassify the drug.
The presidency is a powerful position, and the job application should be hard on hopefuls.
The vice president's exaggeration reflects a pattern of dishonesty in the administration's pitch to voters who oppose the war on weed.
Contrary to the president's rhetoric, moving marijuana to Schedule III will leave federal pot prohibition essentially unchanged.
Two debates, no RFK Jr.—not an improvement.
Will the real president of the United States during the years 2020 through 2022 please stand up?
Plus: Gaza's updated child-casualty numbers, Kamala Harris being a cop, birthrate worries, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors about President Joe Biden holding up arms shipments to Israel.
Plus: Hunter's guns, AI replacing dating, East German cars, and more...
Plus: NYC whale deaths, Ann Coulter's twisted immigration views, protesters playing the victim, and more...
New York prosecutors are relying on testimony from several people who do not seem trustworthy.
Plus: Stormy's testimony, colleges posting bail, Optimus rising, RFK's brainworms, and more...
Total spending under Trump nearly doubled. New programs filled Washington with more bureaucrats.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about cancelling student loan debt.
Plus: Fertility rate collapse, New York Times angers liberals, Met Gala picketing, and more...
Biden has not delivered on his promise to decriminalize marijuana.
The pledge, while mostly legally illiterate, offers a reminder of the former president's outlook on government accountability.
To convert a hush money payment into 34 felonies, prosecutors are invoking an obscure state election law that experts say has never been used before.
Plus: Trump speaks at L.P. convention, Bill Ackman buys Zyn for the frat bros, Ukraine flagging, and more...
Moving marijuana to Schedule III, as the DEA plans to do, leaves federal pot prohibition essentially untouched.
Once again, DeSantis is a guy who claims to love freedom—until he disagrees with the choices some adults make.
Kennedy’s plan for government-backed mortgage bonds will do to housing what federal student loans have done to college tuition.
"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 leading possibilities are all problematic in one way or another.
Reproductive freedom initiatives are advancing toward November ballots, putting the matter of abortion access in voters' hands.
Plus: Trump's trial, MMA fighter trots out Mises, the forgotten canceling of Brendan Eich, and more...
"There's all these illiberals on the left, there's all these illiberals on the right, and yet liberalism endures," says the longtime executive vice president of the Cato Institute.
The case hinged on statutory interpretation, not the merits of the state's 1864 ban.