Are U.S. Strikes on Houthis Constitutional?
Joe Biden is the latest of a string of presidents to deny Congress its rightful role in war making.
Joe Biden is the latest of a string of presidents to deny Congress its rightful role in war making.
The modern presidency is a divider, not a uniter. It has become far too powerful to be anything else.
Sadly, not by drinking it—the government just lost a fifth of the state’s inventory.
A new movement promoting scientific, technological, and economic solutions to humanity's problems emerges.
The local prosecuting attorney in Sunflower, Mississippi, is seeking to take away Nakala Murry's three children.
Columnist Joe Nocera debates Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein.
The amended bill applies only to schools, polling places, and certain government buildings.
Dewonna Goodridge quickly discovered that Kansas civil asset forfeiture laws were stacked against her when sheriff's deputies seized her truck.
A proposed ordinance would empower people to sue supermarkets that close without giving the city six months' advance notice.
Bruce Frankel was tased by a police officer in 2022 after his fiancee called 911 seeking medical help. Now he's suing.
The Turkish government tried to hand over a mayorship to someone who only got 27 percent of the vote. Residents just weren’t having it.
The 35-year-old Texan formerly known as Dustin Ebey voted for Gary Johnson in 2016 and says the national debt is America's biggest problem.
Instead of a hefty real estate tax hike, voters want more logical, long-term solutions to a genuine crisis.
The government still blames the private sector despite its own role in creating, exacerbating, and prolonging the shortage.
Dev Patel's action debut is a righteous, wild revenge film.
Plus: Ethan Mollick on AI, Nancy Pelosi's kente cloth, hurricanes may destroy us all, and more...
The anime Mashle: Magic and Muscles offers an absurdist metaphor for politically driven discrimination.
Instead, the White House is pushing for similar job-killing regulations on the national level.
Concerns about public safety will eventually recede, but Big Brother will still be watching.
A locked-down high schooler started asking libertarian thinkers what people in her generation should know.
Apple's pricey new headset ends up feeling clunky.
It's in cities that greater absolute numbers of religious people can compensate for declining per capita rates of religious observance.
The centrist establishment lane in third party presidential politics remains empty.
Michael Garrett and other Texas inmates get less than four hours of sleep a night. He argues it's cruel and unusual punishment.
Harold Medina, who severely injured a driver while fleeing a gunman, ordered a thorough investigation of his own conduct.
Breaking down Rubio's factually flawed and logically incoherent call for more government involvement in the economy.
When schools get rid of advanced offerings, they hurt smart, underprivileged students.
Potentially good news for the nearly 100,000 Americans on the transplant waiting list.
Ethan Mollick, Wharton School professor and author of Co-Intelligence, discusses AI's likely effects on business, art, and truth seeking on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Plus: Evil tech bros want to teach kids math, Utah and Texas tackle DEI, Trump loves Sinéad, and more...
Surprisingly strong support for "none of the above" in the 2024 primaries shows voters aren't thrilled with their options.
These handouts will flow to businesses—often big and rich—for projects they would likely have taken on anyway.
Jackson County, Missouri, voted not to extend a sales tax that would have benefited the Chiefs and the Royals.
Last year, the offices of the Marion County Record were raided by police. A new lawsuit claims the search was illegal retaliation against the paper.
If drug warriors really wanted to punish "those responsible" for the transgender activist's death, they would start by arresting themselves.
In a new book, left-wing writers debate whether America is going fascist.
From struggle sessions to cancel culture, the story depicts the terrors of surveillance authoritarianism.
The civil liberties lawyer talks to Reason about the misguided impulse to attack free speech in the name of protecting women.
Democratic Party bosses in the Garden State say that a court order to design better ballots will make it harder to tell voters what to do.
The entrepreneur, who founded the Cicero Institute to fix government and the University of Austin to fix higher education, wanted space to flourish.
Plus: IDF scandal, Latin America's "small penis club," Havana syndrome, and more...
Governments around the world have been on a borrowing spree, and prosperity has suffered.
Celebrate your independence with a subscription to Reason magazine, your most trusted source of honest, insightful news and analysis.