Biden Says Drug Users Shouldn't Be Jailed but Won't Do Anything To Stop It
Plus: "Cancel culture" confusion, Biden rejects student loan forgiveness, Stossel and Snowden on internet privacy, and more...
Plus: "Cancel culture" confusion, Biden rejects student loan forgiveness, Stossel and Snowden on internet privacy, and more...
Americans are choosing jobs, brands, and friends for partisan reasons, say researchers.
Online companies might not be as nefarious as you think.
The policies he favors would arbitrarily limit Second Amendment rights and threaten the industry that makes it possible to exercise them.
After a backlash, the host of the ABC dating show said he would step aside.
Also: What we learned from impeachment.
Further evidence that tariffs simply don't make sense as trade policy. President Joe Biden should take note.
Leading Republicans continue to find dubious areas of agreement with Democrats.
The vast majority of the shortfall is from failures at fossil fuel-powered plants.
Is this really what reopening looks like?
"They were just doing their jobs."
The unfolding legal saga of City of Hayward v. Stoddard-Nunez
Abrasive, tasteless, and uncompromising, Flynt undoubtedly made the world safer for speech of all varieties.
Plus: The aftermath of the New York Times' anti-Pornhub crusade, and more...
Does the Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures include the right to be free from an unreasonable attempted seizure?
Presidents aren't saints. They aren't monarchs. They aren't celebrities. And they aren't your friends.
"Silicon Valley's Safe Space" has misinformed readers.
Preserving the country's greatest restaurant scene in the midst of a pandemic feels like an afterthought.
The Senate minority leader's triangulation does not bode well for the GOP's ability to stand for something other than a personality cult.
An overreliance on identity politics may drive these voters away from the Democratic Party.
Half a century ago, Congress declared that there is no legitimate use for psilocybin. State and local governments are finally challenging that judgment.
Whether the reality-show-star-turned-first-president-to-be-impeached-twice has a future in American politics, however, sadly remains an open question.
The 33-year-old lawmaker, who occupies Justin Amash's old seat, on how his party needs to reclaim the mantle of limited government, capitalism, and individualism.
Hawaii's 10-cent booze tax draws ire of brewers, while Alabama moves toward legalizing alcohol delivery.
A proposed wealth tax would collect 97 percent of its revenue from famous billionaires.
Most states managed to avoid much-predicted fiscal crises during the pandemic. Congress wants to shower them with more federal aid anyway.
The first-in-the-nation tax is an expensive and regressive policy that's also possibly unconstitutional.
"You did it to yourself, hon," the officer says.
Kenan, meanwhile, is a stale as sitcoms get.
This is what you get when you mix "science" with "stakeholders."
The former attorney general reportedly nixed a plea deal that involved a sentence of more than 10 years but would have precluded a federal prosecution.
After getting a ballot initiative voided, she says she’ll also resist legislators attempting to legalize marijuana.
Tech companies should have the same freedom to choose their customers.
A person you know might be having an online conversation without a transcriptionist and a fact-checker right now, and we have to stop it.
The winners in every battle over restrictions are the people who do whatever they please without regard for government officials.
In comments to The New York Times Magazine published this week, the new treasury secretary says free trade has been "so negative" for "a large share of the population." That's just wrong.
While the administration symbolically ended Trump's "zero tolerance" approach, it has not put an end to family separations outright.
Plus: Biden won't pursue Trump's TikTok and WeChat bans, Mitt Romney's child allowance plan, and more...
Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield revisit the horror of a civil rights battlefield of the 1960s.
The paid online newsletter service allows writers the opportunity to keep more of the fruits of their labors.
Probably not, if you read the newspaper. Parental preference is one of the most commonly misunderstood factors in the school-reopening debate.
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