Alien: Romulus Is a Slick, Empty Franchise Pastiche
The taut, grisly new entry plays like a greatest-hits reel.
The taut, grisly new entry plays like a greatest-hits reel.
Plus: Taylor Lorenz scandal, Chinese economy in trouble, tax-free tips, and more...
If you want something done right, do it yourself. That includes protecting family, friends, and neighbors.
Rob Henderson's new book documents his journey from a troubled adoption to Yale and Cambridge.
Beware the Thierry Bretons of the world.
Two Venezuelan immigrants explain the current political unrest in the country.
Personal data retained by government or private entities are always at risk of compromise, misuse, or access by law enforcement.
Exempting tips from the federal income tax would add to the deficit and unfairly penalize nontipped workers. It's a bad idea no matter who is pitching it.
Plus: East River swimming, Nord Stream update, Palmer Luckey, and more...
A new poll challenges the protectionist narrative currently dominating both sides of the political aisle.
Desperate to control soaring rents, the city council bans rental data tools while ignoring its own role in the housing crisis.
The president is reversing a ban on selling offensive weapons to Saudi Arabia and advancing taxpayer-funded military aid to Israel.
The business journalist discusses his new book Go Woke, Go Broke and how CEOs accelerated corporate political activism only to regret its impact on the economy.
Making emergency contraception easier to get leads to more people getting emergency contraception. Who would've guessed?
Plus: Subway crime stats, millennial wealth building, CNN roasted, and more...
A new report ranks the states on their occupational licensing requirements.
Does the Second Amendment allow the government to ban guns in common use for lawful purposes?
The former California senator and prosecutor has a long record of pushing illiberal policies.
The Minnesota governor is being hailed as a YIMBY zoning reformer despite doing nothing of consequence on the issue.
The ban was "enacted with the express purpose of insulating Florida agricultural businesses from innovative, out-of-state competition," according to the suit.
Trump's campaign dismisses recent crime data while glossing over the fact that he was president during the huge homicide spike in 2020.
The bill’s sweeping regulations could leave developers navigating a legal minefield and potentially halt progress in its tracks.
Would a YIMBY building boom rejuvenate urban family life or produce sterile, megacity hellscapes?
Twitter's founder says Nostr is “100 percent what we wanted”—an open, ownerless network.
Plus: RFK Jr. thrown off the N.Y. ballot, Ukraine advances into Russia, and more...
Disney said they wanted to "avoid reinforcing stereotypes." The company's solution was to take away roles from a group that has almost no opportunity in Hollywood.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about tariffs and subsidies in the manufacture of electric vehicles.
A new survey suggests that neither Harris nor Donald Trump have won over a majority of voters with their respective economic visions.
Assassinating enemy leaders isn’t a silver bullet for solving international conflict.
The Institute for Justice says Indianapolis police and prosecutors are exploiting one of the biggest FedEx hubs in the U.S. to seize cash for alleged crimes they never explain.
Repeat offenders accounted for over 40 percent of the hefty cost.
The FDA, which approved the protocols for the studies it now questions, is asking for an additional Phase 3 clinical trial, which would take years and millions of dollars.
Texas has set an October 17 execution date for Robert Roberson, convicted in 2003 of murdering his 2-year-old daughter.
"The conversations are overwhelmingly productive and positive," says a representative from Decriminalize Sex Work.
Plus: Guided missile submarine sent to the Middle East, European tourism controversies, and more...
A lawyer who should know better wants to ignore the history of snooping cops to fight guns and crime.
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world.
Dorr Legg saw the government as homosexuals' enemy.
Washington bureaucrats are rewriting the rules on drinking, and a hidden panel of unelected officials could be paving the way for Prohibition 2.0.
British economist Geoffrey M. Hodgson argues private property and individual enterprise fueled the Great Enrichment.
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