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Why many activists prefer personal attacks to scientific debate.
Nicaragua is finally recovering from natural and man-made disasters. So why is it still so crazy?
How the Clinton administration is expanding its power before it leaves town.
Eminent philosopher John R. Searle defends free speech, free inquiry, and the Enlightenment.
Economist John Lott discusses the benefits of guns--and the hazards of pointing them out.
Self-righteous vandals lead a desperate, ill-informed campaign against genetically modified foods.
Why parents in Washington, D.C., are embracing vouchers and charter schools--and what that says about public schools.
What's wrong with The New York Times Magazine's answer to Ann Landers.
Biotechnology will make it possible for us to live longer and better. So why are some people dead set against it?
Now the greatest threats to freedom come from those seeking stability and the "one best way."
How radical legal theory from America is destroying civil liberties in Great Britain.
Colorado's embattled Taylor Ranch is the West writ small. Here's how capitalism may conserve it.
Is the Nobel Peace Prize winner complicit in murder? What the Brits can teach Americans about libel law.
The latest fight over wine labels is part of the ongoing struggle between wets and drys.
Why online betting can't be stopped--and why Washington shouldn't bother trying.
After studying nonviolent drug offenders, a criminologist who once said "Let 'Em Rot" now says "Let 'Em Go."
Rep. Christopher Cox talks about his committee's report on Chinese espionage, his long-term campaign for budget reform, and the connection between freedom and encryption.
The moralists' attack on medical progress and patient freedom
When the University of Wisconsin sat down to evaluate its repressive faculty speech code, nobody expected free speech to win. Here's how it happened.
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