Looming Deadline
Plus: Nuclear reactors, space firsts, Fani Willis' love life, Trump sneakers, and more...
Plus: Nuclear reactors, space firsts, Fani Willis' love life, Trump sneakers, and more...
Amid fear of rising crime, let's take a careful and deliberate approach—lest innocent people lose their rights and property.
Liberty to engage in voluntary transactions and keep our wealth varies across North America.
In the game's Phantom Liberty expansion, those who make the laws rarely follow them.
The pirates in Our Flag Means Death end up more interested in skirting imperial powers than in plundering.
Don’t let culture war politics overwhelm a commitment to the facts.
Michael Moynihan, journalist and co-host of The Fifth Column, discusses Tucker Carlson's recent trip to Moscow on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Where are the fact-checkers and misinformation cops?
Next week, Congress will have to choose between a rushed omnibus bill or a long-term continuing resolution that comes with a possible 1 percent spending cut.
Plus: Russian sanctions, Finnish gun ranges, Milei supremacy, and more...
The policy is a true budget buster and is ineffective in the long term.
The measure, which will be on the March 5 ballot, would greatly expand the SFPD's power while subjecting it to even less scrutiny.
"The people who violated the governor's mandates and orders should face some consequences," a Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board member said in 2022.
Former Rep. Justin Amash says "the idea of introducing impeachment legislation suggests there's other people who will join you. Otherwise, it's just an exercise in futility."
It's part of the government's expensive public-private partnership meant to address concerns over a reliance on foreign countries, like China, for semiconductors.
This new wave of forgiveness shows how Biden can keep canceling student loans, even after his defeat at the Supreme Court last year.
Bureaucratic ineptitude leads to waste—and more people on the streets.
The supposedly reformed drug warrior's intransigence on the issue complicates his appeal to young voters, who overwhelmingly favor legalization.
A new Cato Institute report reveals that just 3 percent of those who have applied for green cards will get permanent status in the U.S. in FY 2024.
State Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker cited the Bible to explain why.
Plus: Teen boys go after tampons, Ken Paxton goes after migrant charities, and more...
The dangers inherent in targeting criminals-to-be have yet to be addressed.
Misled by a bad law, graduate students are drowning in debt.
Many apps collect data that is then accessed by outside entities. Should you care?
Neither Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg nor New York Attorney General Letitia James can explain exactly who was victimized by the dishonesty they cite.
Plus: A listener asks if the editors have criteria for what constitutes a good law.
According to a new lawsuit, NYC's child protection agency almost never obtained warrants when it searched over 50,000 family homes during abuse and neglect investigations.
The WikiLeaks founder already has spent as much time in a London prison as DOJ lawyers say he is likely to serve if convicted in the U.S.
While the deputy's death is tragic, all evidence indicates that the woman handcuffed in his back seat died as a result of his negligence.
Thomas agreed with the Court's decision to not take up two challenges to New York's rent stabilization law but said the constitutionality of rent control "is an important and pressing question."
Plus: Voters in Massachusetts reject state-mandated upzonings, Florida localities rebel against a surprisingly effective YIMBY reform, and lawsuits target missing middle housing in Virginia.
Plus: Catholic funeral for transgender activist, Donald Trump's props, deep tech in El Segundo, and more...
In The Experience Machine, philosopher and scientist Andy Clark offers an updated theory of mind.
The law that Attorney General Letitia James used to sue the former president does not require proof that anyone was injured by his financial dishonesty.
And a federal judge just said so.
Unfortunately, Willis’s Fulton County includes assets seized from non-prosecutors in its budget.
Harvard should pick someone with academic integrity as its next president.
Jakarta, Indonesia, shows why you don't need central planners to get pedestrian-friendly urban design.
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
Listening to the sounds of war at the site of the October 7 Hamas attack.
Despite brazenly lying on financial documents and inventing valuations seemingly out of thin air, Trump's lender did not testify that it would have valued his loans any differently.
Ralph Petty likely violated the Constitution. In a rare move, a federal court signaled this week that lawsuits against him may not be dead on arrival.
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