Department of Homeland Security
DHS Just Turned 20. It's Time To Abolish It.
Break it up into fewer, smaller agencies that are more accountable to pre-9/11 departments.
Department of Homeland Security
Break it up into fewer, smaller agencies that are more accountable to pre-9/11 departments.
Plus: U.S. special forces seeks “next generation” deepfake tech, the economic cost of the PRO Act, and more…
A ballot initiative that would have allowed recreational use was defeated by a large margin in a special election.
When politicians manipulate industry, the public pays the price.
The president and his predecessor both tried to impose gun control by executive fiat.
"Lifetime registries are wrong," said the plaintiff's attorney. "They're wrong based on the science and they're wrong based on the reality that risk is not static. It is dynamic."
According to a recent report, the system Palin once said was "so weird" that it "results in voter suppression" worked just as well as intended.
DeSantis' foreign policy seems to be defined by a simple rule: Whatever Democrats do is wrong, but whatever Republicans do is right.
Plus: San Francisco claims to have "significantly disrupted" sex trafficking, a nationwide injunction on abortion pills, and more...
Amit Katwala’s Tremors in the Blood explores how unreliable technologies have been used in our criminal justice system.
The Ohio train accident was frightening enough. Spreading inaccurate information won’t help the citizens of East Palestine.
Beware of activists touting "responsible research and innovation." The sensible-sounding slogan masks a reactionary agenda.
Contrary to the Supreme Court's First Amendment precedents, Donald Trump thinks harsh criticism of the president should be actionable.
Plus: The editors puzzle over Donald Trump’s latest list describing his vision for America.
While inflammatory comments about "gender ideology" abounded at CPAC, the issue is hardly a top priority for Americans in general.
The federal government owns the majority of land in states that have seen the biggest pandemic-era housing price spikes. Selling that land off for residential development makes abundant sense.
Plus: More lawmakers move to decriminalize psychedelic plants, Tennessee's "adult cabaret" law, and more...
Politicians lean on the financial industry to target activities they don’t like.
Does he want to limit government, or is he just out to win at all costs?
Convincing law enforcement officers that those who do wrong will suffer consequences is by far the most powerful tool for changing police behavior in the long run.
Maryland bars and restaurants have a tendency to turn away vertical ID holders. But there's no state law mandating this.
In rebuking the legislation, the president showed that he may not know what's in it.
Both parties are complicit in the lethal policies that gave us fentanyl disguised as Percocet.
While a conservative skepticism toward military aggression would be welcome, Republican standard-bearers are all too happy to sign off on war powers in other ways.
"The country is that divided," said one business owner. "We kind of want to be with our own people. We want to stick together."
Michael Friend was arrested in 2018 for holding a sign that read "Cops Ahead" near a police checkpoint. That arrest violated his First and Fourth Amendment rights, a federal appeals court has ruled.
True abundance requires a minimal state and free markets.
Lawmakers should proactively retake the power of the purse from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, regardless of how the Supreme Court rules.
But it's exactly what they need to start talking about.
Asian adversaries aerially admire American angst and apathy.
Today's Star Wars fulfills the promise of the late '90s internet.
A new 60-minute screen time warning on TikTok won’t stop kids from scrolling.
Plus: The SAFE TECH Act, Reason talks to young conservatives at CPAC, and more...
The latest bid to amend Section 230 would threaten free speech and creators' ability to monetize content while also subjecting tech companies to a flood of frivolous lawsuits.
It doesn't make sense to create laws that restrict activities enjoyed by the general populace to protect a tiny minority that will undoubtedly partake in those activities anyway.
For transit to continue to serve a valuable role in the few places where it can compete, policy makers will need to rethink how service is provided.
Jason Statham in an underpowered Guy Ritchie spy flick.
Nothing focuses the mind quite so intently on the sheer stupidity of government as doing your taxes.
In Meme Wars, so-called "disinformation" experts call for the suppression of more ideas and speakers to protect democracy.
The glowing documentary makes no mention of her failures or even shortcomings as speaker.
"It's not about money or jobs or fiscal conservatism," one CPAC attendee told Reason.
A senator, a state attorney general, and a former congressman excoriated the law while getting much of it wrong.
According to the Justice Department's reading of the law, the crime need not involve impersonation or even fraud.
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