Corruption and Crackdowns in California's Marijuana Market
Black markets thrive under mismanaged legalization.
2.5 million dead bees, and an unlikely test of public health powers.
Black markets thrive under mismanaged legalization.
The tension between two libertarianisms in the big tent
The service bot will revolutionize warehouses, hospitals, farms, and maybe your home.
San Fransicko author Michael Shellenberger on homelessness, crime, addiction, and his differences with progressives and libertarians.
The issue has never been a lack of funds for infrastructure; it's that the money frequently ends up getting spent on something else via a highly politicized decision-making process.
Dutch officials are updating zoning laws to allow homes that are fixed to the shore but rise and fall with the water.
Perhaps our culture is accidentally creating PTSD by expecting it, assuming that no one could possibly emerge from a trauma psychologically intact.
For years, immigration restrictionists have borrowed arguments from the environmentalist fringe to make their case against allowing immigration to developed nations.
Though voters simultaneously approved initiatives aimed at legalizing both recreational and medical use of marijuana, Amendment A got quickly tied up in court.
When you plug your phone into your car to listen to your favorite band or podcast, you give police a way to rummage around in your personal data without a warrant.
The state's tax commissioner claims NASCAR owes Ohio more than $549,000 in unpaid taxes merely because the state's residents watched NASCAR races on television.
Since the 1960s, planners have convinced many state and regional governments to limit the physical spread of urban areas.
For years, experts warned that any given hurricane or heat wave cannot be attributed to long-term changes in average temperatures. But it turns out that climatologists and meteorologists sometimes can establish such causal relationships.
With inflation running above 7 percent, we are experiencing the strongest price pressures in nearly 40 years.
When bed-and-breakfast owner Robert Boule asked Border Patrol agents, who were questioning a guest, to leave his property, an agent pushed him to the ground.
Blood, sweat, and tears in Naomi Novik's Scholomance novels.
The education pioneer's authoritarian personality was at odds with her commitment to children's independence.
This new HBO documentary portrays the January 6 riot as more of a temper tantrum than an incipient coup.
When the multiplayer role-playing game hit the market in 2010, it was a disaster, panned by critics and series fans alike. But developers retooled it and it found a committed audience.
Randall's actions hint at the dark side of people who are just trying to make things better for everyone—regardless of whether their victims want the help.
Looked at one way, it's a lesser Game of Thrones. Looked at another, it's a show about governance and social power in the absence of contemporary governmental institutions.
"Single millennials today, I'm calling them the new Victorians. They really are! They have much less sex than we did in my generation. They're careful."
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