Attn, London Reasonoids! Nick Gillespie Speaking at Battle of Ideas, 10/28-29
Debating Trump, Deplorables, and the future of libertarianism this weekend.
Debating Trump, Deplorables, and the future of libertarianism this weekend.
The Justice Department splits over the worst way to fight the drug war.
Temperamentally more than ideologically, the Jeff Flakes of the world do not fit into a politics increasingly marked by collectivist reaction.
"Marijuana-related" crashes are not necessarily related to marijuana.
That is the definition of throwing the baby out with the bath water.
The Harvey Weinstein story is not just about the end of a career. It's about the end of an era.
The Harvey Weinstein story is not just about the end of a career. It's about the end of an era.
Trump is crass and abrasive and toxic? So are the policies he adopted for a base that establishment conservatives cultivated.
Will snooping reauthorizations just get quietly dumped into a spending bill?
Allowing the health law's insurer subsidies to go unpaid may be the superior outcome for everyone.
Virginia should eliminate Certificates of Public Need.
According to the latest survey, 64 percent of all American adults and 51 percent of Republicans think pot should be legal.
The move comes after a cyclist complained on a radio show.
How much do Uber drivers make, and why does that matter?
Despite being a finalist for the National Book Awards, Democracy in Chains is fatally flawed history.
Both perpetrators were black males.
Private contractors have actually fought for America since America began, but they're not a panacea.
The controversy over Trump's condolence call should be a debate about promiscuous military intervention.
"You don't have to know algebra to shoe a horse," says member of the International Horseshoeing Hall of Fame. California officials disagree.
Media slam "profit-seeking" military contractors, yet evidence shows they're more efficient and even helped end piracy in Somalia.
The feds are now going after social-media users for being tagged by Twitter accounts they don't like.
"There may not be a place for a Republican like me in the current Republican climate or the current Republican Party."
Ted Cruz joins Rand Paul and Mike Lee in enthusiastically endorsing lawless jurist Roy Moore.
Transportation innovation is seeing more people flee outdated public transit.
The Fourth Amendment matters to some legislators.
"If the bourgeoisie hide the food, I myself will bring it to your house," President Nicolas Maduro promised. That's not what happened.
Social media fact-checks, secondary scrutiny for 11 countries, and the lowest annual cap in modern U.S. history.
FISA reauthorization would majorly expand use of warrantless digital surveillance data against Americans.
Robert Bork, majority rule, and District of Columbia v. Heller
Cosmopolitan isn't very cosmopolitan when it comes to costumes.
It's all about deregulation to foster innovation.
Regulators, for once, are pushing back.
The Trump administration should look at America's participation in other U.N. offshoots too.
Diverse people who dislike one another are perfectly capable of sharing a country-if you don't insist on driving them into mutual conflict.
What kind of cheerleader for war doesn't know how many troops are where?
How can you re-program the thinking of boorish college students when their free speech guarantees get in the way?
In the race to shower Amazon with economic development cash, the only winning move is not to play-as San Antonio has decided to do.
This week's show covers the John Kelly phone flap, former presidents against Trump, and why Republicans are only pretending to be worried about the budget.
Gilbert Hyatt's 25-year legal battle is a story of greed, harassment, anti-semitism, and the abuse of power.
Angry protesters shut down Tommy Robinson event.
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