Vague Visa Rules Leave Laid-Off Twitter Worker Unable To Return to U.S.
Foreign-born tech workers in the U.S. have been especially vulnerable as tech giants lay off large shares of their work forces.
Foreign-born tech workers in the U.S. have been especially vulnerable as tech giants lay off large shares of their work forces.
One officer was fired and another was placed on restricted duty this week, but there are still a lot of unanswered questions.
A decade as a right-to-work state made Michigan better off.
The former president wanted to "open up" defamation laws. The governor of Florida is about to try.
Volkswagen unveiled a cheap new electric concept car, but protectionist policies mean it's not worthwhile for the company to introduce it in the U.S.
The appeals court says regulators violated the Administrative Procedure Act when they tried to pull menthol vapes off the market.
"I will not appear to condone the diminishment of any group at the expense of impertinent gestures toward another group for any reason, even when the law of the land appears to require it," he wrote.
Four years after IS was officially defeated, the U.S. continues to keep hundreds of troops in Syria to fight the vanquished terrorist group.
A bipartisan bill backed by J.D. Vance and Sherrod Brown would include a two-member crew mandate that unions have long sought—and that wouldn't have prevented the Ohio disaster.
Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like the recent trend of rising administrative bloat is going to reverse anytime soon.
Plus: Theatrics at the House hearing on TikTok, doomsday merger predictions haven't panned out, and more...
Officials used the crisis to impose policies they already supported but couldn't get through the normal legislative process, like bans on evictions.
Our mobile devices constantly snitch on our whereabouts.
A new novel by Reason contributor Kat Rosenfield
Two New Jersey women who gave birth last fall suffered harrowing ordeals thanks to their breakfast choices.
The Kentucky Republican also expressed disappointment that Congress has not repealed the war on terror authorization of military force.
TikTok's CEO served as little more than a punching bag for lawmakers with a dizzying array of big tech grievances.
Seven sheriff's deputies say the rapper subjected them to "embarrassment, ridicule, emotional distress, humiliation, and loss of reputation" after a drug bust on his house came up empty.
It would result in shortages, decreases in productivity, and higher production costs affecting millions of American workers and nearly every consumer.
Nature's 2020 endorsement of Joe Biden changed no minds but did significantly undermine trust in science.
This was never about shielding just the youngest kids from sexual topics.
The designer of China's Great Firewall sees new A.I. tech as a concern for public authorities.
James King is once again asking the high court to rule that two officers should not receive immunity for choking him unconscious and temporarily disfiguring his face.
Coinbase says the agency's assault will "only drive innovation, jobs, and the entire industry overseas."
Copyright law is just one area that must adapt to account for revolutionary A.I. technology.
If Republicans refuse to gore their three sacred cows, a new CBO report shows that balancing the budget is literally impossible.
Prisons and jails around the country have been banning physical mail and used book donations under the flimsy justification of stopping contraband.
Plus: did the editors sing Happy Birthday to Adam Smith?
Plus: Police sue Afroman for using footage from raid, California bill could ban popular junk foods, and more...
The problem is the immigration process itself, not a lack of funding.
Defending a categorical ban on gun possession by cannabis consumers, the Biden administration cites inapt "historical analogues."
"The future of our planet depends on how we feed ourselves…and we have a responsibility to look beyond the horizon for smarter, sustainable ways to eat," says GOOD Meat's CEO.
Federal, state, and local officials will always threaten to weaponize the state against private actors they don't like. The "Kia Challenge" provides the latest example.
Reason's Austin and Meredith Bragg on satire in an insane world and the man who ended New York's ridiculous, decadeslong ban on pinball.
Greetings from the second International Conspiracy Theory Symposium, where one of the most cited findings in the field has been debunked.
Austin Bragg and Meredith Bragg talk Remy, libertarian parodies, and their new indie film, Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game.
Plus: American IQs may be shifting, Jack Daniel's lawsuit against dog toy maker hits SCOTUS, and more...
Are we stumbling into disaster? Again?
The legal challenge to censorship by proxy highlights covert government manipulation of online speech.
Public sector unions squeeze final gains out of a district that's been bleeding students yet constructing expensive new buildings for two decades.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about the path to full drug legalization in America.
What at first appears to be deregulation is actually economic activism in disguise.
Climate change is a problem, but the IPCC AR6 Synthesis Report is wrong to suggest that humanity is on the brink of catastrophic warming.
A new Netflix documentary shows how the seeds of political polarization that roil our culture today were planted at Waco.
"The firing squad, in my opinion, is beneath the dignity of the state of Idaho," said one state senator. "We have to find a better way."
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