Rutgers Orders Freshmen to Add Microaggression to Their Course Lists
New research says such diversity programs can make campus less inclusive and more polarized.
New research says such diversity programs can make campus less inclusive and more polarized.
Proponents of government spending warned of a budget full of cuts, but that's not what happened.
Embracing harm reduction, the agency's new head tries to make e-cigarette regulations less onerous.
But then what's new with the Florida senator?
But not a desire for greater fairness.
Government officials talk a good game about income inequality but impose policies that raise household costs, discourage employment, and kill opportunity.
Certain reforms can increase the store of liberty and equality at the same time-which means both gubernatorial candidates should find them worthy of support.
People are people whether they are acting in the marketplace or in the political arena.
The administration thinks it will resound with Trump voters. But during the campaign, he claimed to be a better friend to the LGBT community than Hillary Clinton.
Denied a hearing and suspended, the recent Rollins College graduate is now suing.
A handful of food-industry groups say an equally bad federal law takes precedence.
Despite a settlement essentially exonerating him, Paul Nungesser is still a rapist in a media narrative.
Greens are more interested on assigning blame than looking for fixes.
The pharmaceutical market is anything but free at present.
Charlize Theron is all out of bubblegum.
The bill would drive up struggling counties' costs of providing such services.
There's little daylight between the average liberal activist and the average healthcare reporter.
A GOP bill would set up impossible obstacles for fleeing foreigners
Blockading the doors to a Heather Mac Donald speech is a kind of censorship.
Once again the CFPB regulations make ordinary Americans worse off.
Liberals and others will often find fault with the court, as well as Trump. But thanks to the justices, they will have a wide berth to complain.
Programs that don't work as intended ought to be cut.
Overspending is what government does.
The attorney general revives a program that invites law enforcement agencies to evade state limits on asset forfeiture.
Let them eat chlorine-washed chicken.
The Republican Party hates immigrants more than it hates big government.
Let them eat chlorine-washed chicken.
Cops plant evidence to meet quotas, compete, and settle scores. Eased asset forfeiture with little oversight would just bribe them to do more damage.
Bans on drinking and eating in public and a host of other lousy rules could jeopardize Italy's culinary future.
Charlaine Harris' books come to NBC while Russian agents invade CNN.
Assembly Bill 284 had little chance of passage because it dealt with an actual problem and was getting pushback from some muscular lobbies.
There's a growing, and troubling, acceptance of speech restrictions among millennials and Democrats.
Christopher Nolan tries to make war great again.
Democracy in Chains mangles the facts beyond recognition. But the book still has something to teach us.
So why do cops rely so much on the practice? Enforcing traffic laws is a large share of what they do.
Businessmen should spend more time peddling products, not pushing protectionism.
The Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Virginia unveiled a plan for economic growth in the rural parts of the state.
A lawsuit makes a plausible case that Trump's blocking of critics violates the First Amendment.
The Humane Society even opposes artificial rhino horn, which would lower demand for poachers' fare.
When the press tilts in favor of higher taxes and more regulation, democracy is indeed distorted.
Licensing laws are putting 61-year-old Sally Ladd out of work. Together, we're suing.
A half century after the psychedelic movement came to a screeching halt, MDMA scientists are making the most of a second chance.
The Obama-era "Open Internet Order" discourages a free internet.
New study says men are more concerned about free speech and for women it's safety concerning the internet.
Dentists use political muscle and control of regulatory boards to limit competition. How many other licensed professionals do the same?
The program desperately needs radical surgery
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