In Utah, Bad Booze Bills Never Die
In an attempt to create a new banquet license, a bill introduced in Utah would require every restaurant to build a wall that blocks off its private party space from the rest of the establishment.
In an attempt to create a new banquet license, a bill introduced in Utah would require every restaurant to build a wall that blocks off its private party space from the rest of the establishment.
Plus: College says abortion art runs afoul of state law, the politics of Silicon Valley Bank's collapse, and more...
During the pandemic, the U.S. mortgage market avoided collapse without any bailouts. Here's how.
While the population has grown, the number of college students has declined in the past decade.
Each year, the DEA sets production limits for certain drugs, including some ingredients in common amphetamine pills like Adderall.
Plus: The editors recommend the best books for sparking interest in free market principles.
In just two weeks, he has learned to hunt and survive. There's a lesson there.
Turning every streaming service into TikTok is bad for the internet. It'll be disastrous for music.
Even as the president bemoans the injustice of pot prohibition, his administration insists that cannabis consumers have no right to arms.
Under the Kelo v. New London Supreme Court decision, a state can take private land to give to a private developer for almost any reason it wants.
The law allows abortions when there is a "medical emergency"—but what qualifies as an emergency?
More immigration from China would both hobble a geopolitical rival and make America richer and better.
Despite his declared commitment to freedom and fiscal conservatism, DeSantis' immigration policies represent a dramatic expansion of government power and spending.
In a chaotic universe full of infinite realities where all choices are relative, individualism still matters.
The Fed's anti-inflation measures had to hurt someone.
Plus: Fox News troubles, junk statistics about illicit economies, and more...
It’s a win for self-defense rights in ongoing campaigns to conscript businesses for political causes.
During the recent multiday battle over the next speaker of the House, media outlets were free to capture Congress members negotiating, debating, and even losing their cool.
Conservatives have been slow to recognize the threat that drug prohibition poses to gun rights and other civil liberties.
"It's not clear that FTX would have existed, at least at its scale, if we had domestic guidelines for American companies," the former senator tells Reason.
A new report details how plea bargaining can hurt defendants and warps the justice system.
"I hurt every day," said the victim's mother. "I cry all day, every day."
Yet another court decision stopping a U.C. Berkeley housing project is getting California's policy makers to think bigger about reforming the infamous California Environmental Quality Act.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg reportedly intends to prosecute Trump for falsifying business records.
The Institute for Justice says Robert Reeves' First Amendment rights were violated when prosecutors filed and refiled baseless felony charges against him after he sued to get his car back.
The advent of effective new weight loss drugs offers hope for millions of overweight people.
Members of Congress showed their true colors at a Thursday hearing.
Handouts for tourist-trap museums will be part of the federal funding battleground in the next two years.
Mayor Eric Adams frets that COVID-19 masks are making it too easy for shoplifters to evade facial recognition.
Plus: "Flipping the proverbial bird is a God-given" right, administrative state abuses, and more...
Police dogs seriously injured 186 people within the last two years—more than batons or tasers did, according to the ACLU.
Criticism of public officials doesn't have to be polite, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court confirmed.
McDonald's invested in some spiffy new toys, but almost everything else stayed the same.
Hating tech billionaires is The Current Thing.
What we did for Ukrainians, we could do for other migrants too.
Big corporations and entire industries constantly use their connections in Congress to get favors, no matter which party is in power.
Jenna Ellis admitted that she made 10 false claims while representing the former president and his campaign.
"If I would have gone to college after school, I would be dead broke," one high school graduate told the A.P.
And now the state thinks it needs to crack down even more.
Lawmakers are considering giving state officials the ability to rewrite NIMBY cities' restrictive zoning codes.
Plus: States move to stop cops from lying to kids, Biden wants to raise Medicare taxes, and more...
Biden is set to propose a new tax on unrealized investment gains and to quadruple a recently imposed tax on stock buybacks.
He did "what any dad would—he went to hug his crying kid," says former town councilman Keith Kaplan.
Yes, even children should have access to an attorney.
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