Inconceivable Rights: I Do Not Think That Word Means (Just) What You Think It Means
The infection of postmodernism apparently goes way back.
The infection of postmodernism apparently goes way back.
Today the governor signed a bill that eliminates penalties for possession and home cultivation.
"If all we're trying to do is prepare people for a job, why not prepare them with a job?"
"If all we're trying to do is prepare people for a job, why not prepare them with a job?"
Probing uncomfortable gender and generational splits on the latest Reason podcast.
Consent is sexy, but fear is a real mood-killer.
The PRIME Act would fork over millions to one of the world's wealthiest corporations.
He assaulted the Kentucky senator over a brush pile.
While the risk of "opioid misuse" increased with the duration of the prescription, the overall rate was low.
A new poll shows white women souring on the GOP.
Some cops are livid, the New York Post reports.
The federal "shutdown" doesn't lead to anarchy. It won't even lead to less government spending.
Critics of free speech use the same old arguments on new technologies.
Legal language, like mathematical language, often gives multiple definitions to similar terms.
The quest to fix our messy, meddlesome foster care bureaucracies
You get one guess and if you can't figure out, go back to first grade.
I'm all for carefully reading the words of the Constitution, and applying the distinctions that it draws -- but we need to make sure we're understanding just what those distinctions are.
Luckily, no actual nukes are involved. But it could be politically destructive.
Everything you need to know about the Trump/GOP/Schumer/Pelosi/Democratic government shutdown of 2018 in a single tweet.
Budgeting isn't about budgeting anymore.
Many restrictions on liberty may be unwise and wrong -- but not unconstitutional.
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Why I hope the Court leaves its "physical presence" rule for sales tax collection intact, or How I Learned to Love the Dormant Commerce Clause.
Uncertainty over Brexit and meddlesome rules could harm the EU's leading exports and industry.
How courts exploit superstition to uncover hidden truths
A computer search decision from a new Sixth Circuit judge, John Bush, has been generating some controversy. Let's take a look.
Democrats draw line in the sand over DACA; Senate goes back to the drawing board.
That would mean more time to address whatever problems man-made climate change may cause
Some people are pushing Trump to fund his infrastructure dreams with a 140 percent increase in the federal gas tax.
Will Baude and I have cosigned a new amicus brief on this in Janus v. AFSCME.
People who want to keep the drug czar's office running can't come up with a good reason why.
The government now says it will prosecute only those it can prove committed specific criminal acts.
The man was charged with promoting prostitution after allegedly saying he was going to exchange the gift cards for sex.
The Court's decision to take the case is not surprising. It could potentially result in a very important decision addressing the scope of presidential power over immigration.
An arrest is worse than a humiliating sext.
Sharon Stone stars in a sometimes-confounding noir thriller.
Crossfit is fighting to keep the government from regulating how Americans are taught to exercise. The health of the nation may be at stake.
Crossfit is fighting to keep the government from regulating how Americans are taught to exercise. The health of the nation may be at stake.
The House-passed continuing resolution died Friday in the Senate, but any deal to keep the government operating will likely do similar damage to the deficit.
The Supreme Court agrees to hear challenges to Travel Ban 3.0
How is America's Energy Future looking nine years after I first panned it? Not so good.
Boing Boing has filed a motion to dismiss.
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