Americans Can Fight Bigotry Without Trump's Help
The president's appalling equivocation on Charlottesville is strengthening private moral forces
The president's appalling equivocation on Charlottesville is strengthening private moral forces
Imperialism is not the highest stage of capitalism, as Karl Marx claimed.
Advocates of liberal society are a side in themselves, and the left- and right-wing thugs battling in the streets are rival siblings from an illiberal family.
Antiglobalism and anticosmopolitanism might flow purely from economic ignorance, but it is hard to believe that's all it is for many people.
Obama was not the friend CEOs think the president of the U.S. should be. But in Trump, they're finding out what it's like to have a real enemy.
A new study shines a light on public health protection at America's stadiums.
Another questionable college sexual assault investigation winds up in court.
Documentary navigates complex custody fight between Cuba, United States, and Cuban-Americans.
After a large jury verdict award over a rapist cop, the Orange County Sheriff's Department says it's looking into changing its policies.
Channing Tatum, Adam Driver and a down-home Daniel Craig bring Steven Soderbergh back to the big screen.
Studies show students in schools of choice have more respect for the rights of people they don't like.
From solar to coal, politicians love to subsidize power production.
As Trump learned this week, pandering to white nationalists means alienating most other Americans.
Many of those who would recoil in horror at racist notions find similar notions strangely beguiling when they are dressed up in more genteel language.
Nicolas Maduro's brand of socialism has brought poverty, hunger, and death.
Google banning talk about that is appalling, though owners can do as they like with their companies.
He can continue pursuing lethal supply-side policies, or he can focus on saving lives through harm reduction.
The overreaction to critiques of diversity methods ramps up the culture war unnecessarily.
Nostalgic accounts of life under communism avoid the broader perspective of widespread oppression and economic failure.
Just because Congress can't fix health care doesn't mean it can't be done.
The former Google employee and author of a now notorious memo about the company's diversity culture chats with Reason.
The Truman war council discussed using atomic bombs just two weeks after the Korean War started.
Instead of striving to ingratiate himself with those who hold his fate in their hands, the president seems determined to antagonize them.
States like Massachusetts attempt to control how farms outside their borders operate.
Despite evidence they may make things worse, airstrikes are mistakenly seen as a perfectly reasonable response.
Also: Another mediocre Wayans family show.
Robert Pattinson is a major surprise in a strange and wonderful new crime flick.
Anaheim school district resisted effort tooth and nail.
The vast majority of the histrionic reactions on social media and elsewhere have misrepresented not only what the memo says but also its purpose.
A lawsuit alleges a university president intervenes on behalf of the daughter of a wealthy donor.
It isn't just another useless, overpaid bureaucrat, but a crippler to any mission to Mars.
History suggests that if the government chokes off the supply of foreign labor, American workers won't step in to reap rewards.
Small, achievable reforms are the key to tackling America's mounting national debt.
Using some of the lingo, at least.
Why the attorney general might be reluctant to target state-licensed marijuana merchants
Entrepreneurs' efforts are wildly creative-but so are government officials' destructive policies.
An emerging consensus that President Trump doesn't deserve credit for the stock market boom since his election deserves a second look.
If we Americans value freedom, we will dismiss the social engineers, open the borders, and liberate ourselves.
Oregon is the latest. Let's welcome this tasty trend.
From dark and disturbing to the gloriously absurd.
On asset forfeiture, prison sentences, and police oversight, Trump's beleaguered attorney general is rolling back decades of progress.
It's how their rules were made to work.
Kathryn Bigelow's vintage violence.
Whether affirmative action is helpful at all is debatable.
The GOP predictably fails to deliver on their small government rhetoric.
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