HUD Refuses To Release Secretary Marcia Fudge's Email Address in Response to Reason FOIA Request
Cabinet officials often use pseudonymous email accounts, but declaring them secret from records requests is another matter altogether.
Cabinet officials often use pseudonymous email accounts, but declaring them secret from records requests is another matter altogether.
Plus: Adult activists, Fani Willis' love life, Catholic crackdown, and more...
Bad ideas never seem to truly die in Washington.
The errors are so glaring that it's hard not to suspect an underlying agenda at work here.
A City on Mars is a counterbalance to the growing optimism over space exploration.
As we step into 2024, it's crucial to adopt a more informed perspective on these dubious claims.
The colorful, mostly libertarian history of Key West.
Plus: State officials attempt to ban Donald Trump from 2024 election ballots.
With another “rapid unscheduled disassembly,” the second Starship test in November was a mixed success.
If our best and brightest technologists and theorists are struggling to see the way forward for AI, what makes anyone think politicians are going to get there first?
The year's highlights in blame shifting.
Ballots should be counted quickly and accurately.
Stanford's Jay Bhattacharya debates St. John University's Kate Klonick on the federal government's role in social media censorship.
The good news: Regulators have exercised unusual restraint.
Eradication of the apex predator is "likely impossible."
"It's not really a movement. Nobody is pushing it. People are just living it."
Stanford's Jay Bhattacharya debates St. John University's Kate Klonick on the federal government's role in social media censorship.
The growing anti-transparency atmosphere in the state might make the Florida Man extinct.
The world will not come to its end in 2030 because of climate change.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
The brief urges the Supreme Court to reverse its badly misguided precedent in Pruneyard v. Robins.
Plus: Digital AR-15s, actual AR-15s, politicians livestreaming sex acts, and more...
"Basis of some COVID-19 vaccine technology"
Lawmakers should consider a user-fee system designed to charge drivers by the mile.
Plus: Grimes the urbanist, Matt Taibbi's fight night, crazy AI applications, and more...
The former journalist defends misinformation in the Trump era and explains why so many journalists are against free speech.
The webathon is technically over, but if there's one thing journalists understand, it's procrastination.
A conversation about economics, progress, science fiction—and kitchen gadgets.
The ban, scheduled to take effect on January 1, is likely unconstitutional in multiple ways, the judge held.
Plus: DeSantis vs. Newsom, a controversial Christmas-tree lighting, Brazilians use AI, and more...
Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?
NYPD radio frequencies have been open to the public since 1932. A new encrypted system will end that.
Plus: Four-day ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, teen activists, anti-murder billboards, and more...
A new Friedman biography ably explores the economist's ideas but sidesteps the libertarian movement he was central to.
Plus: Getting babies out of Gaza, lobster roll economics, gerontocracy update, and more...
When people from historically privileged groups are facing censorship, that doesn't mean people in historically marginalized groups are actually being empowered.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about libertarians and "reflexive contrarianism."
"The FDA's regulations related to animal testing no longer fully conform with applicable law," writes the Kentucky senator.
Plus: OpenAI apocalypse, New York's problematic pie, Backpage trial concludes, and more...
A separation of science and politics might be called for.
The private sector space company overcame red tape and government delays to get to launch day.
The results are interesting and suggest weird and significant biases.