The Lockdown Showdown
Alarmed by unilateral COVID-19 restrictions, states are imposing new limits on executive authority.
Alarmed by unilateral COVID-19 restrictions, states are imposing new limits on executive authority.
Why Bernie Sanders, Hasan Piker, and Elizabeth Warren should open their wallets before they open their mouths.
Distillers have been granted emergency regulatory relief—for now.
Two January premieres offer a narcodrama and a tiresomely predictable medical procedural.
Rogel Aguilera-Mederos faced harsh punishment under the state’s mandatory minimum sentences for insisting on the right to a trial.
The pandemic has served as a nice reminder of the merits of federalism, where states are the laboratories of democracy that can try regulatory approaches that conform to local attitudes and conditions.
Squalls of flak suddenly surround one of the year’s most loveable movies.
James T. Bennett's libertarian critique argues that noncommercial radio can be detached from the state—and that it's better that way.
Stranger still, the leading drug policy reform organization supported Schumer's obstruction.
For decades, libertarians have focused on illiberalism coming from the political left. But authoritarianism has taken root among many conservatives across the world.
A one percentage point increase in interest rates translates into a $30 trillion increase in interest costs on the national debt.
It's bad public policy to leap to the conclusion that we do.
The NYPD declined to punish nine other officers, despite recommendations from the city's Civilian Complaint Review Board.
Despite bipartisan momentum at the federal level, Congress still couldn't get anything over the finish line.
Too Many (Government) Dollars Are Chasing Too Few Goods.
Suffice it to say, the pandemic did not lead to great childhood independence policies.
Virginia is moving on without the Democratic duo.
Joe Biden promised to do better by migrants upon taking office, but he fell short in 2021.
"The First Amendment was never intended to curtail speech and debate within legislative bodies."
Hungary's brand of nationalism generates not just cronyist domestic policy but tawdry foreign policy as well.
The union is preparing to strike if its demands are not met.
Ronald Bailey and Jacob Sullum on the future of COVID-19, the politicization of science, the failure of mandates, and how to talk with anti-vaxxers.
And we would be better citizens if we called him out for it more.
Vaccination and prior infection induce a strong second line of immunological defense, finds South African study.
Breweries and wineries can still do it, though.
The findings reinforce the case for nicotine vaping products as a harm-reducing alternative to cigarettes.
Last year may have been the year of the Cuomosexual, but 2021 rightly disabused people of the notion that New York's governor had their best interests at heart.
The best thing you could say about Bill de Blasio was that he was good for a laugh.
While this is a problem, it's not one that scrapping Section 230 would solve.
Our drones still patrol the skies, and our tax dollars will be paying off the costs of failed nation-building for decades.
It sucked for avoidable reasons.
Politicians and cops found creative ways to dodge responsibility in 2021.
Focusing on infections rather than severe disease is more misleading than ever.
Should the no-fly list include another 70 million Americans?
Canadian officials recognize that immigrants are key to the post-COVID economic recovery. The U.S. should take note.
As the NFL goes, so goes the nation?
If only they would apply that lesson to other goods and services.
A New York state judge found video of guards ceding control of Rikers to gang leaders more than enough evidence to order the release of a pretrial inmate.
Financial pressure is the main reason why people say they move, and pandemic-era public policy created a lot more financial pressure in certain places.
“We essentially reorganized our society around the control of a single infectious disease, when in fact, health is plural," says Stanford professor of health policy Jay Bhattacharya.
The 1619 Project author thinks Terry McAuliffe had it right.
Celebrate your independence with a subscription to Reason magazine, your most trusted source of honest, insightful news and analysis.