Keri Blakinger Is a Figure Skater and a Felon
"The most valuable thing taken away while in prison is time," says the author of Corrections in Ink.
"The most valuable thing taken away while in prison is time," says the author of Corrections in Ink.
Sebastian Mallaby's The Power Law explores how venture capital and public policy helped shape modern technology.
Rents and home prices skyrocketed almost everywhere over the past two years. There's some hope new supply will bring costs down in the new year.
This week, a clip of Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin claiming that speech that espouses "hate" and "violence" is not protected by the First Amendment made the rounds on Twitter, sparking sharp backlash.
The tendency of those in power to topple or embarrass themselves by overreaching should provide a lesson to policy makers.
The governor and attorney general say they’ll appeal to the state Supreme Court.
Re-regulating the airline industry won’t help prevent massive service disruptions in the future.
Freeman, an early adopter of the virtual currency, gets slammed by a state that can't tolerate any use of money without its permission and knowledge.
"She is way too young to be walking this distance by herself," said the cops.
A surveillance state is no less tyrannical when the snoops really believe it's for your own protection.
The director worries that the public doesn't trust his spy agency.
Libertarians should recognize language as a quintessential example of spontaneous order.
It shouldn't be the federal government's responsibility to protect wealthy homeowners from the inevitable.
The prospects in the next session, when Republicans will control the House, are iffy.
Criminal justice advocates are pushing to pass legislation to tighten rules for juvenile interrogations, but the NYPD is not on board.
Administrators at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology reportedly hid top academic awards from students to not "hurt" the feelings of their classmates.
"She never spoke a word to me after this," the staffer, Sasha Georgiades, tells Reason.
Florida threatens a venue for letting minors attend a sexualized holiday cabaret performance with their parents.
If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
The famous internet law is headed for the High Court.
The mysteries of the mind are harder to unravel than psychiatrists pretend.
Political criticism of Southwest's mass flight cancelations mask a cronyist relationship between government and the passenger airline industry.
In the mid-'70s, people disengaged from political conflict and took up jogging. Maybe it's time to do the same.
While other pandemic policies have ended, the migration measure has “outlived [its] shelf life,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote yesterday.
Stanford University psychologist Keith Humphreys misconstrues libertarianism and ignores its critique of prohibition's deadly impact.
Fortunately, government kills fewer prisoners each year.
When I was young, I assumed government would lift people out of poverty. But those policies often do more harm than good.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion of "stakeholder capitalism" or Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investing.
Rivian, an electric truck manufacturer that hopes to compete with Tesla, received a lucrative deal to build a new factory in Georgia despite concerns about its finances.
Overbearing CDC guidance, pointless calls to the police, and more.
The year’s highlights in buck passing feature petulant politicians, brazen bureaucrats, careless cops, loony lawyers, and junky journalists.
Landlords say that nearly three years of eviction moratoriums is forcing some property owners out of the rental business entirely.
S.B. 58, which emulates an initiative that Colorado voters approved last month, would legalize the use of five psychoactive substances found in fungi and plants.
Plus: The editors look back on what pieces of cultural media impacted them the most this year.
The massive power of federal government attracts frauds.
After two terms in the Senate as a champion for free markets and limited government, Pennsylvania's Republican senator is heading into retirement.
Reformers had two years of unprecedented victories—and then protectionists started using scare tactics to block them
A slew of recent research suggests parents should relax a bit about screen time.
Social media, streaming, and a new era of digital self-censorship
Deregulation can help the millions of people who prefer flexible, independent jobs.
Living without government services isn't necessarily cheaper or easier, but it sure beats putting up with municipal bureaucracies.
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world.
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