The Abortion Debate Is Messy. Two Lawsuits Against the FDA May Make It Worse.
Litigation over abortion drugs turns disagreements about individual rights into a bureaucratic tussle.
Litigation over abortion drugs turns disagreements about individual rights into a bureaucratic tussle.
In this film, it's mean and funny enough to work.
The book's 12 thematic chapters are dense and rich—like flan, but good.
The state's labor groups have explicitly said their policy is about protecting jobs from new technology.
No overpopulation doom but humanity is still at risk by overstepping planetary boundaries.
"KCPD has continuously and repeatedly advised Plaintiff and his fellow officers that if they did not fulfill a 'ticket quota' then they would be kicked out of the unit," the complaint states.
Philip Esformes' case is a story about what happens when the government violates some of its most basic promises.
Restrictions on baby carriers during takeoff and landing are based on a single study from 1994 that didn’t even study these types of devices.
Plus: Australia's failed news media bargaining code, two ways government created an Adderall shortage, and more...
Where am I supposed to spend my cryptocurrency?
A Colorado man was convicted under an anti-stalking law for sending hostile messages online.
The union "has an outsized impact on working families who have no other choice on where to send their children...that power, combined with a mayor who is essentially a wholly owned subsidiary, would make them a dangerous force," says one former Chicago Public Schools executive.
By forcing mixed-race characters to choose one or the other, the game is arguably doing something more problematic.
"I didn't know if this would ever end," says Melissa Henderson. "I'm very relieved. A heaviness has lifted."
Developer Westside wanted to turn its 155-acre property into 3,200 homes and a public park.
The continuing ambiguity reflects the legal challenges that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg faces in transforming one hush payment into 34 felonies.
Lakeith Smith's case epitomizes the issues with the "felony murder" doctrine.
The Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs author and former Reason staffer reports back from post-privacy America.
No, and that good news needs to be front and center in all discussions of gun control, especially after school shootings.
Abortion and gerrymandering are likely to be on the court's docket in the near future, and Janet Protasiewicz ran unabashedly to the left on both issues. Is this the best way to decide contentious topics?
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about Congress' attempt to ban TikTok with the RESTRICT Act.
Arlington's successful passage of a modest missing middle housing reform bill after an intense debate raises the question of whether YIMBY politics can practically fix the problems it sets out to address.
Alvin Bragg's case against Donald Trump has put the once-obscure position of district attorney into the national spotlight.
Also: The sensitivity readers come for sci-fi anarchist Ursula Le Guin, how foreign trade can make American supply chains more resilient, and more...
The New York charges look weak, and Americans think they’re politically motivated.
Eliminating taxation on compensation for being a human guinea pig is just good public policy.
The Biden administration is defending a federal law that disarms Americans based on "boilerplate language" in orders that judges routinely grant.
Prosecutors are counting each record misrepresenting the former president's reimbursement of that payment as a separate crime.
S.B. 1718 would make it a third-degree felony to “harbor” or “transport” undocumented immigrants. Some Florida faith leaders say it could threaten their church activities.
"Even after his 2021 exoneration, Baltimore County prosecutors have opposed Clarence receiving compensation for the injustice of being wrongfully convicted," says an attorney representing the man.
Trump is charged with 34 criminal counts connected to the payment of $130,000 to porn star Stormy Daniels in 2016 as part of a nondisclosure agreement.
If Congress wants to stave off such far-reaching demands, it should start behaving in ways that inspire more public confidence.
The state promised Ford nearly $900 million in incentives, including new and upgraded roads. But it chose to run that new road through a number of black-owned farms.
Plus: Debating whether GPT-4 actually understands language, U.S. immigration law stops a college basketball star from scoring, and more...
Does Ukraine face an existential risk? Does it matter?
Where libertarians debate democracy, open borders, cats and dogs, and more
"We are here because one preschooler pulled down another preschooler's pants," says defense attorney Jason Flores-Williams.
College players on student visas face complex barriers when it comes to profiting off their names, images, and likenesses.
Plus: the terrible case for pausing A.I. innovation
When "graduation becomes close to a virtual guarantee, it also becomes pretty functionally meaningless," says one education researcher.
Taxpayers spent about $500 million to build U.S Bank stadium, which is just seven years old.
New bill makes a mockery of parents’ rights, school choice, and educational freedom.
Under the new Kentucky law, state-licensed dispensaries will begin serving qualifying patients in 2025.
This total is 2.5 times the state's annual budget.
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