Colorado Can't Force a Graphic Designer To Create Same-Sex Wedding Websites, Supreme Court Rules
The decision reverses a terrible previous decision by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The decision reverses a terrible previous decision by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Phantom thunderstorms scotch thousands of flights, because the FAA sucks.
But poor record keeping hides the real number.
A study from researchers at Johns Hopkins is the first to look at the effects of Texas' 2021 "Heartbeat Act" on live births.
It might as well have been titled Indiana Jones and the Quest for Cash.
The environmentalist and anti-vaccine activist talks about his presidential run and whether he'd jail climate change skeptics.
Plus: Perspectives on the affirmative action ruling, how U.S. policy is thwarting Cuban capitalists, and more...
It's wrong to use human beings as pawns in an apparent political stunt.
Environmental activists expect us to modify our lifestyles to meet their priorities.
Reading between the lines of The Wealth of Nations
"If he goes down, so will journalism," Assange's father John Shipton says in the documentary.
There is no reason for public universities to grant preferential treatment to the scions of their alumni.
Service cuts that reflect falling demand and zoning reforms that bring more fare-paying residents back to cities could shore up transit agencies' budgets.
In a 6–3 decision, the Court ruled that race-based affirmative action in college admissions violates the 14th Amendment.
At last, a chance to watch elite athletes openly taking advantage of modern science.
At a minimum, the national debt should be smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver.
Joe Biden's big economic speech is a poor attempt at a branding exercise.
Now both a violent and nonviolent felon have been found by lower courts to have a Second Amendment right to own weapons. The Supreme Court will likely consider the issue in the near future.
A new Congressional Budget Office report warns of "significant economic and financial consequences" caused by the federal government's reckless borrowing.
Plus: Snapchat cleared in sex crime case, New Hampshire embraces universal licensing reciprocity, and more...
RFK Jr. on libertarianism, Tulsi Gabbard, conspiracy theories, drugs, guns, free speech, and more
Rent control is getting a rhetorical makeover from progressive policy makers.
Wired's "senior maverick" on his new book of accumulated wisdom, backlash against tech, and why the future still looks bright.
The lawsuit claims the ban has no "legitimate penological justification"
Global warming is an issue. But there are other pressing problems that deserve the world's attention.
After losing more than $100 million in a single year, Yellow Corporation got a $700 million pandemic assistance loan from the government. It has only paid $230 on the principal.
It’s an entirely predictable consequence of an inhospitable immigration system.
The enigmatic privacy obsessive is fighting to keep the cypherpunk dream alive.
"During the visit, Biden could have refrained from deep public embraces of Modi or from emphasizing India's democracy. He chose to do neither," says Michael Kugelman.
Plus: Maine prostitution measure becomes law, "significant misconduct" in jail where Epstein hung himself, Mike Pence defends free markets, and more...
Feudal-style squabbling with the control of nuclear weapons at stake.
His bloody rhetoric undermines his defense of the sentencing reforms he proudly embraced as president.
A new audit says one out of every $6 distributed by the Small Business Administration during the pandemic was stolen.
James Barber is set to be killed next month, the first execution after a string of botched lethal injection executions in the state.
Agents claimed to see a gun that wasn't there. Video reveals nervous officers with a hunting mentality.
Chief Justice John Roberts decisively rejected the independent state legislature theory.
Lordstown Motors received $24.5 million to operate an Ohio factory. G.M., the factory's previous owner, received $60 million before shuttering it.
Will the Beaver State join Maine and Alaska?
More than 90 percent of Americans already have access to high-speed internet.
The 2024 hopeful has put together a platform full of big-government action.
Plus: Why people believe doomer narratives, schools seek to define social media platforms as public nuisances, and more...
Golden State municipalities are finally overturning their anti-cruising ordinances.
The National Association of Medical Examiners now says "excited delirium" should not be cited as a cause of death.
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