The State of the Union Is Shouty
Plus: A listener asks the editors a question about progressive taxation in the United States.
Plus: A listener asks the editors a question about progressive taxation in the United States.
Also: Oppenheimer and Godzilla win at the Oscars, Virginia state lawmakers nuke plans for taxpayer-funded arena, and more...
I argue that the justices botched the legal analysis and relied too much on questionable policy considerations.
The president has not expunged marijuana records or decriminalized possession, which in any case would fall far short of the legalization that voters want.
The 14-year-old nonprofit is about to find out whether third-party politics has a centrist/establishment lane.
Plus: Illegal immigrants at Whole Foods, AI predicting homelessness, Chinese espionage, and more...
The "uncommitted" protest campaign had a strong showing in Minnesota, but underperformed in other states.
"People are not in politics for truth-seeking reasons," argues the data journalist and author of On The Edge: The Art of Risking Everything.
Who you gonna believe during Thursday's speech, the president's protectors or your lying eyes?
On some issues, Haley offered a fleeting glimpse of what a serious Republican party could look like.
Plus: Charter cities, bitcoin, nuclear energy, San Francisco, and more...
A leading originalist legal scholar explains what the Court got wrong.
Despite voters' continued disgust at the idea of a Trump/Biden rematch, the former president is poised to carry nearly every state.
There is nothing in the Constitution that prevents an inmate from winning the presidency.
There are reasons to suspect the justices were wrangling over language up until the last minute.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for short quotes from fictional works that are representative of libertarian ideas.
Three justices who concurred in that judgment accuse the majority of trying to "insulate all alleged insurrectionists from future challenges" by going further than necessary.
Plus: A partial budget deal, Super Tuesday, the State of the Union, Harris calls for a cease-fire, and more...
No matter who wins between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, chaos is likely to ensue.
There is nothing in the Constitution that prevents an inmate from winning the presidency.
Plus: Putin threatens nukes, D.C. mulls a crackdown on theft, Bloomberg blames right-wingers, and more...
The other Biden policy abroad that left an imprint on Tuesday’s presidential primary
Plus: Balkan begging, California corruption, Russian gravediggers, and more...
But the ruling will be effectively overturned if the federal Supreme Court rules in favor of Trump in the Colorado disqualification case, as seems likely based on the oral argument in that case.
Plus: Brooklyn communists, Shenzhen Costco, Chernobyl mythbusting, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors for big picture thoughts on United States foreign policy interventions in other nation states.
Plus: Adderall shortages, infrastructure lessons, Kanye West, and more...
Despite holding out against a seemingly inevitable Trump nomination, Haley lost in her home state.
Former Rep. Justin Amash says "the idea of introducing impeachment legislation suggests there's other people who will join you. Otherwise, it's just an exercise in futility."
The supposedly reformed drug warrior's intransigence on the issue complicates his appeal to young voters, who overwhelmingly favor legalization.
Neither Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg nor New York Attorney General Letitia James can explain exactly who was victimized by the dishonesty they cite.
Plus: Catholic funeral for transgender activist, Donald Trump's props, deep tech in El Segundo, and more...
Despite brazenly lying on financial documents and inventing valuations seemingly out of thin air, Trump's lender did not testify that it would have valued his loans any differently.
The essence of the case, the Manhattan D.A. says, is that Trump "corrupt[ed] a presidential election" by concealing embarrassing information.
If you’re going to set arbitrary prices for labor, why not shoot for the moon?
Three-quarters of voters and more than half of Democrats are concerned about the president's age.
A recent poll finding that 18 percent of all Americans and 32 percent of Republicans believe Taylor Swift is part of a covert conspiracy effort to help Biden win reelection. This is just one example of the broader problem of political ignorance and bias.
When he's on his game, he's still one of the best bullshit detectors in the media.
Plus: A listener asks if the state of Oregon’s policy on drug decriminalization should be viewed as a success.
Most of the justices are clearly inclined to reject a Colorado Supreme Court decision asserting that power under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.
It was a week of bad news for the president. Fortunately for him, he probably won’t remember.
Plus: Tucker Carlson interviews Vladimir Putin, Rep. Ilhan Omar opposes minimum parking limits, my baby enjoys the DDR, and more...
There's a reason why Democrats are freaking out over comparative anti-interventionists RFK Jr., Jill Stein, and Cornel West.
The justices might well overrule the Colorado Supreme Court on the grounds that only Congress has power to enforce Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. Such a ruling would be a serious mistake.
Peter Meijer talks about his run for Senate, his Trump impeachment vote, and possibly competing against Justin Amash on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
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