Ending Section 230 Would Kill the Internet as We Know It
Don’t unleash censors; restrain them more!
Don’t unleash censors; restrain them more!
The presidency is a powerful position, and the job application should be hard on hopefuls.
Cyber intrusions, arson, bombings, and other mayhem feature in the conflict between West and East.
The Institute for Justice has launched a project to reform land use regulation.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act expires at the end of 2025, with a high price tag for most Americans.
The “cure” to national decline might be part of the disease.
Filming cops is a First Amendment right, and there are already plenty of laws against harassing them.
Restricting the price of housing kills incentives to supply places to live.
Half the country says suppressing “false information” is more important than press freedom.
Lower courts have been extremely skeptical of attempts to regulate unfinished parts as firearms.
We live in a world of abundance (when politicians don’t screw it up).
Money supposedly spent to help Americans may actually have done a lot of damage.
U.S. need for Australia’s cooperation in the Pacific may win the journalist’s release.
Concerns about public safety will eventually recede, but Big Brother will still be watching.
Governments around the world have been on a borrowing spree, and prosperity has suffered.
Government officials seek to shape the economy to the liking of politicians.
Hiking wages through law is a crowd-pleaser, but it kills employment unless you’re a robot.
“Even open democracies have implemented restrictive measures,” finds a global report.
Modern cars are smartphones on wheels, but with less protection for your data.
The former civil liberties group continues morphing into a progressive organization.
Nearly 15 million Americans had 31 days or more of at-home preparedness in 2020.
The eroding value of the dollar inflicts pain, and Americans resent politicians who cause it.
The Beehive State joins a growing wave of defiance aimed at Washington, D.C.
One in five national governments tried to intimidate or kill exiles in recent years.
The First Amendment restricts governments, not private platforms, and respects editorial rights.
An escalation in the war between people who publish secrets and those who seek to keep them.
The dangers inherent in targeting criminals-to-be have yet to be addressed.
Unfortunately, Willis’s Fulton County includes assets seized from non-prosecutors in its budget.
It’s true that the U.S. pays too much of the continent’s defense bills even as it’s going broke.
It was a week of bad news for the president. Fortunately for him, he probably won’t remember.
Interest in virtual private networks provides insights into a global battle over digital freedom.
Congress and the leading presidential candidates are wildly unpopular. But don’t expect new faces.
Political polarization poisons yet another area of life.
Opponents of pandemic restrictions had their day in court and won a victory for open dissent.
A new report brings remarkable economic illiteracy to its focus on poverty and inequality.
New online database details the shocking extent of intrusive surveillance tech used by American police.
Modern medical devices are lifesavers. But they’re vulnerable to hackers and compromise our privacy.
Survey finds growing acceptance of civilian firearms among the country’s population.
Intoxicants might be a source of problems—or enhance our ability to cope.
Nannies never fall out of love with failed authoritarianism and curbs on freedom of choice.
Americans want choice in education. Politicians need to catch up.
Respecting free speech defends individual rights and lets people show us who they are.
Trying to block immigration by law just means that we’ll get it flowing around the law enforcers.
An excursion into Facebook groups for empty nesters shows many of them could use a hobby, a job, or even a straitjacket.
Flagstaff keeps digging a hole over commercial free speech.
Servicing debt grows more expensive as the deadline to curb the spending spree gets closer.
A separation of science and politics might be called for.
Lower taxes create opportunities that draw even those not consciously considering tax rates.