Democrats' Wall Funding Fiasco
They got nothing in return for handing Trump money except for a national emergency.
They got nothing in return for handing Trump money except for a national emergency.
Dwayne Johnson presides over a sweet, funny and pretty much true pro-wrestling tale.
Government officials want as much revenue as possible so it can spend it with wild abandon. There will never be enough to satisfy them.
Pioneering treatments may require equally pioneering payment models.
"It was me choosing my life."
The presidential contender is a johnny-come-lately on legalization, but she is right about the importance of fun.
This monument to the war on terror is still open, and it's costing taxpayers a fortune.
What constitutes a hate group isn't objective or easily defined, and Portland's resolution makes no attempt to clarify.
It's an inversion of the formula Trump used to get elected by scapegoating illegal immigrants. She's just targeting a different minority group.
Good intentions, private fears, and innovative entrepreneurs vying for government contracts are killing privacy in public places.
At a time of civil unrest, France's government wants to push retail food prices even higher.
Rather than investigating claims against a pediatrician, he was shuffled around. Sound familiar?
A tale of chicken and cultural appropriation in Austin.
An obscure provision designed to protect personnel records makes it nearly impossible to hold the state's cops accountable.
Specifics remain sparse, but universal healthcare will surely increase demand for medical services, and California's already low on nurses.
Black-metal murder boys and a failed Sam Elliott fable.
But the Nevada State Athletic Commission is considering restricting speech after taunts spark a brawl
The state can't scrub gun manufacturing info from the internet, so they're trying to make distributing it a crime--First Amendment be damned.
Neither gun control nor uncritical support of the police can stop the violence required by the war on drugs.
But cruelty has been part and parcel of America's border policy for 150 years
The possibilities and perils of voluntary, privately operated biometric screening
How big hotel chains became arms of the surveillance state.
Even with all the steps the NFL takes to level the playing field between teams, the Patriots keep rising to the top. It generates some envy, and resentment.
How willing are you to pay taxes when you know they're intended to do you harm?
Global food police want to treat meat and sugar products like tobacco.
Government planners do not understand markets, so they promote overly pricey projects that fail to meet our real-world transportation needs.
Give up your quest for wall funding and fire Stephen Miller, please.
Nonsensical protectionist policies won't make the country great again.
In Mercenaries 2, China and the U.S. fight over pieces of Venezuela, before the entire country is wrecked by a nuclear warhead.
New York City's arbitrary restrictions on transporting firearms give SCOTUS a chance to curtail rampant disrespect for the Second Amendment.
Football is popular enough to thrive without politicians subsidizing it.
Is it moral to blame a country's problems on a handful of wealthy individuals? Is it a wise political strategy?
It's time to admit that Venezuela's "21st century socialism" failed.
A lot of what government does is better done by somebody else-or not at all.
If only it weren't so dreadfully slow to dive in.
North Dakota public health bureaucrats, the state grocery lobby, and lawmakers should take note of the law's popularity among consumers
A well-intentioned plan is one of the worst ideas in the governor's new budget given the real-world effect it will have on California students.
Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway in a boldly preposterous noir.
It's time to remove this vital function from the government budget.
How a heavily subsidized Culver City development became the nation's most expensive affordable housing project.
The laws of economics can't be repealed.
The war continues and it's costing lives.
Private schools are holding their ground against surging competition and scared regulators.
Data from North Carolina, Florida, and Arizona show how school choice programs take care of students who would otherwise be neglected.