Why Is America Still In Syria?
Trump brought chaos to a region already on the brink, and the unintended consequences of his actions will reverberate for years to come.
Trump brought chaos to a region already on the brink, and the unintended consequences of his actions will reverberate for years to come.
Trump escalated America's war against Huawei and China. Biden should beware burgeoning technonationalism.
The 45th president busted norms left and right. But the abuse of executive power didn't start and won't end with him.
Glenn Greenwald discusses what went wrong at the outlet he co-founded, what's wrong with the ACLU, and what might go wrong in the Biden administration.
The market's failure to produce an ideal outcome cannot alone justify activist policy, because governments can also fail to produce the ideal.
Canning is a hedge against uncertainty, an education in self-reliance, and a pocket of calm amid tumult.
A Democratic White House and a Republican Senate might be the best of all worlds when it comes to federal housing policy.
Justice Barrett should revisit her views on this wrongly maligned case.
Current law caps the number of employment-based green cards that can be granted each year at 40,000, which doesn't meet demand.
The s-word doesn't actually play too well with most voters.
During the last few election cycles, a wave of well-funded progressive candidates have run for prosecutor's offices in major cities. This time, quite a few reform-minded D.A.s won.
His plan says that by 2035, no electric power should be generated by burning fossil fuels, and the U.S. should commit to zero net emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050.
The lawmakers who passed A.B. 5 ignored the many benefits of contractor status.
Ostrom was best known for her studies of how local groups manage natural resources.
After a 16-month investigation into the big four tech companies, it seems the most that congressional busybodies can accuse them of is routine business practices and having popular services.
Nationwide, marijuana arrests peaked at nearly 873,000 in 2007; the 2019 number was 37 percent lower.
Billionaires may well have enabled our greatest (only?) policy successes in 2020.
Like the Hays Code and Waldorf Statement before it, new diversity requirements are Tinseltown's way of asserting cultural dominance through self-policing.
Drugs, riots, and refugees
The desire to know one's fortune seems to be an instinctive human urge.
The new documentary hammers home the senselessness of the war on drugs.
Gerry Reith's raw, paranoid, apocalyptic fables were shot through with distrust for just about every institution around.
As long as there have been American elections, foreign powers have sought to influence them.
It's a telling sign when a video game opens with a warning that the events it depicts might be a little too close to life.
Ellis' story is a vivid illustration of the principle that justice delayed is justice denied.
Pai has focused on taking a market-based approach to regulating the nation's always-evolving telecommunications industry, with great success.
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world
Excerpts from Reason's vaults