The Minnesota Matchup: Tim Kaine vs. Corey Stewart in Virginia?
Stewart, who called himself "Trump before Trump was Trump," announced a run for U.S. Senate after losing the Republican gubernatorial primary
Stewart, who called himself "Trump before Trump was Trump," announced a run for U.S. Senate after losing the Republican gubernatorial primary
Kim Jong-un's long game isn't suicidal annihilation, it's to remain in power.
Strictly speaking, it's not markets that can and should be free-it's people.
Most of the party's members of Congress have done their best to downplay or excuse Trump's strange fondness for Vladimir Putin.
An extraordinary new documentary on genetically modified foods, narrated by Neil deGrasse Tyson, pushes back against GMO fearmongering.
Academic freedom stripped bare at Howard University.
A new generation faces the familiar dilemmas.
Unions try to use good years to deflect attention from a growing problem.
Andy Serkis is brilliant again in what feels like a wrap for this high-quality franchise.
University of Texas at Austin professors claiming guns on campus have a chilling effect.
Big airlines look to bring protectionism to the skies.
Instead of sweeping new government entitlements, policymakers should instead seek policy reforms that help workers while minimizing economic disruption.
Minimum wage laws have negative effects whether or not their advocates acknowledge them.
There are legitimate reasons to worry about what Trump might do. So why make things up?
A federal appeals court confirms the First Amendment right to record police.
Legalized marijuana came to Nevada, but so have the high taxes and complex regulations that preserve illegal sales elsewhere.
Not even Congress has the power to turn back that clock to the old days of publishing. Nor would anyone with any sense want it to.
How licensing laws that block people with criminal records harm the formerly incarcerated and the economy.
Democrats and Republicans running establishment candidates.
Two lawsuits and action in Congress indicate wasteful, unconstitutional mandates may be on their way out.
CBS show is disposable summer television at its worst.
Legislature aiming at a scary precedent.
News organizations have become obsessed with fighting Donald Trump rather than covering him.
Tom Holland brings the weary web-slinger back to life.
Berkeley and UCSD silence politically incorrect speech but claim to be viewpoint neutral
It's been a sweet two years with a hobbled Export-Import Bank. Now lets get rid of it entirely.
An article in the Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities says "yes."
Journalists covering Trump undermine their credibility by ignoring the distinction between dishonesty and delusion.
Economic dynamism and concomitant abundance are best served by a good dollop of freedom, which, alas, we are in the process of slowly losing.
At the country's founding, there were no walls to stop people from coming ashore and few rules to stop anyone from trying out new ideas.
His colleagues having escaped consequences again and again, Special Agent W. Joseph Astarita might be asking why he's been singled out.
More than 11 percent of prime working-age men in the U.S. are outside the job market.
Taking them down and putting up different statues is a reminder that in understanding the past, we shape the future.
Cities will be able to set local rules governing food production and sales.
John Singleton's latest is a hackneyed embrace of debunked conspiracies.
Despite threat inflation by Iran hawks, the country has limited capabilities.
Aubrey Plaza and Dave Franco get medieval in an under-powered clerical comedy.
Despite framing to the contrary by some.
California's Board of Equalization is the only tax board in the nation with elected representatives.
Don't want to be portrayed as a villain? Stop restricting free speech.
A certain amount of danger is unavoidable in a multinational world. And the dangers of trying to achieve total security are the worst dangers of all.
Republicans embrace more bad ideas on tax reform to avoid spending cuts.
Feelings aren't facts, and shouldn't be treated a such.
A new PBS series, School Inc. by Cato's Andrew Coulson explores why American schools don't improve.
Irrational, half-baked anti-terrorist policies are not necessarily unconstitutional.
Flight-sharing helped fill seats on small, private trips and cut costs. But regulators stopped it.
Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.
This modal will close in 10