Restraining Orders Do Not Prove That People Are 'Dangerous'
The Biden administration is defending a federal law that disarms Americans based on "boilerplate language" in orders that judges routinely grant.
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.
Three reasons not to ban the popular social media app
Plus: Tennessee drag law halted, the FTC's proposed ban on negative option marketing, and more...
The rich are getting richer under the Inflation Reduction Act.
Is an A.I. "foom" even possible?
Maria Montessori valued independence and experimentation in a time of authoritarianism.
Why are so many filmgoers and politicians eager to prop up baseball's boondoggles?
Q&A about the future of drug policy, drug use, and drug culture.
The Manhattan Institute senior fellow and the NYU historian debate whether black Americans should move away from progressivism.
A 9-year-old backed out of a deal to sell her pet goat for slaughter. Local officials and sheriff's deputies used the power of the state to force her to go through with it.
The ballooning of government has 'crowded out’ institutions of civil society, says AEI’s Howard Husock.
New data from the program's trustees show that insolvency will hit a year sooner than previously expected, giving policy makers just a decade before automatic benefit cuts occur.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is relying on debatable facts and untested legal theories to transform minor misconduct into a felony.
56 percent agreed that "people often graduate without specific job skills and with a large amount of debt to pay off."
Surveillance tech that isn't banned often becomes mandatory eventually.
A government big enough to "solve" your minor irritants will do plenty of other stuff you don't like.
One place where environmentalists and libertarians are on the same page
Plus: Evidence that social media causes teen health problems "isn't convincing," more states ban gender transition treatments for minors, and more...
Teachers unions, police unions, and prison guard unions have inordinate control over public policy, and California is suffering the consequences.
Once again, politicians use popular fears to push for open-ended power.
The HBO series features what Ayn Rand would call "second-handers."
The Manhattan Institute senior fellow and the NYU historian debate whether black Americans should move away from progressivism.
The new law would allow developers to build housing on commercially zoned lots provided they include affordable units.
Trump touted his support for sentencing reform as evidence of his "deep compassion," which DeSantis sees as a weakness.
"Defendant Huber intentionally fired his service weapon at Decedent and killed him with gunfire while Decedent posed no threat of death or serious bodily harm to Defendant Huber," the lawsuit states.
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