Sharing Food with Migrants Is a Charitable Act To be Praised, Not Criminalized
Americans have long provided migrants with food and water. Why are we now treating that like a crime?
Americans have long provided migrants with food and water. Why are we now treating that like a crime?
Free market reformers and authoritarian nationalists battle it out to reshape Brazil.
Alabama is one of the least transparent states in the U.S. when it comes to civil asset forfeiture. That could be changing.
The most hilarious overpolicing story you'll hear this week, on the latest Fifth Column podcast
One legislator tried to stop them by reenacting an infamously dumb anti-drug ad. It didn't work.
In which First Things throws a temper tantrum
We’ve got so many giveaways, we’re practically giving them away!
Movie treads the familiar grounds of the beloved, abruptly canceled HBO show.
Texas law lets police hide records of suspects who die in custody from grieving families. It could have been fixed, but a police union torpedoed the reform bill.
The NYPD failed to update its crime-tracking system—and underreported rape by 38 percent.
Listen to journalist Nina Teicholz face off against David L. Katz, MD, the founding director of the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, at an event in New York City.
The ruling says it's acceptable for cities to use ordinances to protect some businesses from competitors.
The researchers found no statistically significant relationship between testing positive for THC and contributing to accidents.
Voters will decide next year whether to impose it.
The eternal battle between man and megalizard continues.
Thanks to the ultimate resource: the human mind
Proposed legislation aims to crack down on "McMansions."
Politically. Economically. Diplomatically. Legally. Trump's tariff threat against Mexico is a stunningly stupid maneuver no matter how you look at it.
Abroad, legislators are in the mood to theatrically punish social media companies. CEOs shouldn’t play along.
Plus: unlicensed diet tips in court, California takes aim at independent contractors, and more...
SCOTUS sidesteps the hard questions in Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky.
Actions speak louder than words. Trump 's labeling of the media as "the enemy of the people" is bad, but he's not breaking into reporters' homes to find leakers. That's what the San Francisco Police Department did.
And that whole Voting Rights Act justification? Kinda the opposite, actually.
The presidential hopeful released his immigration plan on Wednesday.
The jail, which saw several deaths, was overseen by former Sheriff David Clarke at the time.
New York legislators also are taking another shot at legalization.
A compromise version of the bill would cap rent increases at 7 percent plus inflation for three years.
The most absurd attack against the Michigan congressman involves ignoring his entire history in office.
State lawmakers reached across the aisle for a bipartisan push against capital punishment.
Navarro's Wall Street Journal op-ed looks more like a deliberately deceptive attempt to argue that limiting imports will boost economic growth. It won't.
"An elaborate investigative and enforcement regime designed to restrain, deter, suppress, and punish speech."
Sen. Cory Booker's comments were in response to Sen. Bernie Sanders' public education plan, which targets charter schools.
Plus: humanitarians face felonies for helping migrants, Huawei scientists banned from reviewing prestigious journal, and more...
Scuffling GOP primary challenger, meanwhile, defends his assertion that the president would prefer an "Aryan nation"
A mom reflects on her experience parenting in the age of fear.
Another bad idea from the Democratic presidential hopeful.
A finding of guilt would be an attack on the autonomy and self-ownership of all young people
The "blogfather" once touted the internet as the antidote to Big Government, Big Business, and Big Media. Now he wants the feds to crack down on social media.
China's 2010 export restrictions on rare earth compounds failed then, and they would fail now
Watch journalist Nina Teicholz face off against David L. Katz, MD, the founding director of the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, at an event in New York City.
Competitors welcome chance to debate (and defeat!) the Republican congressman who is currently having a national moment.
Demanding that members of Congress be in town to vote on spending huge sums of money seems reasonable.
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