Labyrinthine Zoning Rules Restricted Homeless Shelters During the Pandemic
As COVID-19 spread across the country, complex rules around land use and building permits made housing the poor and vulnerable effectively impossible.
How is virtual reality remaking our world?
As COVID-19 spread across the country, complex rules around land use and building permits made housing the poor and vulnerable effectively impossible.
Despite the abundance of transcripts, FBI reports, and memoirs from those involved, we still know more about the cover-up than we do about the infamous political scandal.
Disreputable and censored comix improbably brought the art form from the gutter to the museums.
Colorado's governor on parenting, partisanship, and sensible pandemic responses
People believe and say things that aren't true all of the time, of course. But efforts by public officials to combat them may well make things worse, not better.
Government officials have declared an Oxford home's shark roof sculpture a protected landmark, against the wishes of the current owner of the house.
South Carolina's NAACP and ACLU are challenging the state's ban on automated data collection.
In America, social change often comes after a politician or government goes too heavily on offense against individuals wishing merely to stand their ground and assert their rights.
Can a web designer be compelled under the First Amendment to host wedding pictures?
"It may be the case that [some American] children give up control of their attention when it's always managed by an adult," say some experts.
The events of 2022 can be seen as another chapter in a very long story: Ukraine looking westward and seeking freedom while Russia slides deeper into autocracy.
Even Obamacare's fiercest advocates say it has not lived up to its goals.
Stimulus checks, government spending, and Putin’s invasion of Ukraine are only part of the problem.
With its unnecessarily complicated and contentious provisions, the MORE Act received only three Republican votes in April.
Now that the pandemic is fading and much of the available rent relief has been spent, L.A.'s eviction moratorium seems like pure regulatory inertia.
There is telling people how to live, and there is maximizing people's ability to live the lives they want.
A new book vividly portrays human beings coping with daily existence in a disintegrating society but offers an incoherent analysis of what went wrong.
Wiretapping and eavesdropping used to be the norm. Perhaps privacy was always an illusion after all.
In his new book, James Kirchick focuses on homosexuals' relationship with national politics during a time when gays were banned from working for the federal government.
Hulu's limited TV series on Elizabeth Holmes shows how regulators failed to catch massive, dangerous medical fraud.
The absurdly enjoyable TV drama shows how managers transformed the NBA in the 1980s.
If you've detected increased sexiness in the atmosphere, you can thank Kim Kardashian and her lingerie brand SKIMS.
The video game serves as a fun reminder that free trade, not protectionism, makes us all better off.
M. Chris Fabricant's new book details how flawed techniques have led to numerous wrongful convictions.
The new movie offers a funny nod both to NASA's glitch-prone engineering and its can-do spirit
The political podcast uses relevant history to contextualize controversial current events.
How bitcoin can help Palestinians bypass the Palestinian Authority's control over their finances
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world.
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