Florida Officials Use a Victim's Rights Law To Stop a Newspaper from Printing Deputies' Names
They shot and killed a man they were trying to evict. Doesn’t the public have the right to know who they are?
They shot and killed a man they were trying to evict. Doesn’t the public have the right to know who they are?
St. Paul has seen a 61 percent decrease in building permits after the city imposed rent control on future housing.
Supporters say they want to "make the Libertarian Party libertarian again." Critics say they’re shitposting edgelords who will destroy the LP from within.
Another example of the infuriating cronyism behind CON regulations, which won't apply to a well-established hospital in Charleston that's looking to move.
Plus: Purity politics, the end of the "millennial consumer subsidy," an unhappy outcome for folks seeking to free Happy the elephant, and more...
The government should loosen laws, reduce conflict between government and the public, and let people defend themselves.
If Congress decides to encourage them, it should not overlook the importance of due process protections.
A new proposed regulation from the Department of Energy would effectively require homeowners to shift to more expensive, more efficient condensing gas furnaces.
His 2000 thesis on civil-rights-era Atlanta lifts passages from other people's work.
The game won't be playable in Belgium or the Netherlands thanks to local gambling laws.
A federal judge rules against effort to stop use of three-drug cocktail.
Plus: progressive groups imploding, stock and crypto markets plunging, and more.
It’s one of many anti-cryptocurrency policies emanating from the Empire State
Disreputable and censored comix improbably brought the art form from the gutter to the museums.
Plus: Will the January 6 hearings change any minds?
A Urban Institute research brief found that affordable housing developments in Alexandria, Virginia, were associated with a small increase in surrounding property values.
Biden's decision to exclude nondemocratic countries led to a boycott by allies.
When the Bushwick bar Honey's tried to host a “Russia, Ukraine, and Food" talk with food writer and academic Darra Goldstein, the angry mob shut them down.
Doctors Adriane Fugh-Berman and Jeffrey A. Singer debate the harms of prescription opioids.
Their deaths are the tragic, predictable consequence of shutting down safer migration paths.
There is bipartisan support to reform the Electoral Count Act to prevent another January 6th.
...and why government spending is like an infestation of cicadas.
William Fambrough supported the "wrong" mayoral candidate, so East Cleveland law enforcement destroyed his van and hit him with petty prosecutions.
The election serves as a trial run for Alaska's new voting process, which could be a boon for third-party candidates.
Plus: trans teens, trouble at the FTC, and more...
Tensions won’t simmer down until Americans stop fearing power in the hands of enemies.
This month, the city passed a number of liberalizing reforms that legalize more types of housing and make already-legal homes more practical to build.
The events of 2022 can be seen as another chapter in a very long story: Ukraine looking westward and seeking freedom while Russia slides deeper into autocracy.
Colorado's governor on parenting, partisanship, and sensible pandemic responses
As COVID-19 spread across the country, complex rules around land use and building permits made housing the poor and vulnerable effectively impossible.
New SIGAR findings shine a light on America’s dysfunctional efforts to train the Afghan National Police, which “actually contributed to increasing criminality” in Afghanistan.
Although the Arkansas senator claims to be targeting "violent felons," his draconian bill would affect many people who pose no threat.
The Federal Reserve started the problem, and consumers are paying for the consequences.
The policy, which only applied to people entering the country by air, not by land, was always ill-conceived. Good riddance.
Doctors Adriane Fugh-Berman and Jeffrey Singer debate the harms of prescription opioids
Officers attempted to cover up a man’s deadly beating by saying he died in a crash. How many other similar incidents have there been?
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis thinks drag shows represent "child endangerment."
The "victim-centered" training required by S.B. 2469 would compromise the impartiality of Title IX investigations.
But the Chinese government continues to stonewall independent investigations.
Only 6 percent of Americans say the federal government is extremely "careful with taxpayer money," yet those same Americans consistently report that they want the government to do more.
Journalist Nancy Rommelmann reports from San Francisco on the ouster of a leading progressive district attorney.
The original Jurassic Park is the best summer movie ever. The latest sequel just wants to remind you the original exists.
Novel series gets six-episode launch on AMC.
Plus: Competing stories about antitrust reform, capitalism didn't cause the formula crisis, and more...
What happened in Uvalde is part of a pattern, not an aberration.
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