There Is No Line
If we want immigrants to follow the law, we need better laws.
Venezuela's failed collectivist experiment brought death and despair to a once-prosperous country.
The East African khat trade is thriving, even as global prohibition creeps in around the edges.
Texan Good Samaritans built a village for those in need—no public funding necessary.
Current evidence points toward a significantly warmer world by the end of the century. This will have substantial impacts on human life.
She's not a libertarian, but Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is shaking up the race for the Democratic nomination.
The case for offering victims of our foreign policy a chance to get out and start over.
Hundreds of thousands of Hongkongers have taken to the streets, smashed lamp posts, and stormed government buildings to keep China from encroaching on Hong Kong's freedoms prematurely.
"There's no question public health would benefit dramatically if everybody switched completely to e-cigarettes."
Her lobbying tax proposal is pseudo-policy, a veneer of wonky seriousness over dubious populist dogma.
There are no supervised injection facilities openly operating in the United States. That might change soon.
Too many of your friends and neighbors are tribal idiots, but they're not the worst tribal idiots in recent memory, by any means.
You need to be inoculated from some strange but popular notions about the economy.
In its eagerness to make the case against Uber, a new book makes a pretty good case for Uber.
In Borderlands 3, you take on a murderous cult worshiping a cruel, vain deity who demands that her minions attack others, sacrifice themselves, and constantly sing her praises.
The show's abundant laughs lie in the space between the way this group of Philly pubkeepers see themselves and how the world sees them.
The film flounders when Handler visits a spoken-word night to see college kids talk about microaggressions, but the film gets better when it shifts focus to more grave issues.
Each chapter profiles those who live on the edge of maritime laws, in the gray areas that are so often unenforceable by land governments.
A new documentary highlights the role played by the CIA and Britain's MI6 in overthrowing Iran's duly elected prime minister back in 1953.
The National Museum of American History display recognizes the throngs who helped enable America's westward expansion.
Sharyn Rothstein's sharp new play is a smart and timely look at how to balance free speech and privacy in a wired age.
"There was a time when the majority of people on Earth were illiterate and starving, and capitalism changed all of that."
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world
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