I Love Dick Is Just What It Sounds Like
The show based on Chris Kraus' novel is full of laugh-out-loud burlesque.
The show based on Chris Kraus' novel is full of laugh-out-loud burlesque.
Cloaking government control in the language of benevolence.
Amy Schumer bounces back, Guy Ritchie returns with a thud.
Once the trust in checks and balances is eroded, it's difficult to regain.
The U.S. could be on the path to French-style economic sclerosis.
By firing the FBI director who was in charge of the Russia investigation, Trump fed the flames licking at his administration.
Obamacare was bad, and its replacements look like a dog's breakfast.
Accommodating religious objections to Obamacare's contraceptive mandate does not violate anyone's rights.
Nigeria will have a higher population than the U.S. by mid-century, when one in four people on Earth will live in Africa.
If he uses it right, the president's experience with taxes and red tape could benefit workers and small businesses.
Not only can entitlement programs be rolled back, but politicians who do it can even get re-elected.
The idea of equality is bandied about on the campaign trail.
The president's executive order on religious freedom lacks any sort of substance.
Awful Obama administration-era reforms are being scaled back slightly. School lunches will still stink.
The Pontiff ought to stick to flock-tending and lay off capitalism.
No, it's not just some corporate conspiracy.
A review of The Knowledge Illusion: Why We Never Think Alone
Rather than smearing Comey, Clinton should be thanking him for not suggesting she be indicted.
California lawmakers are trying to dig a hole too big to fail.
Their schemes to bilk taxpayers in the name of development are getting more outrageous.
A transparent attempt to establish government control over the rare place where freedom is still highly regarded.
The problem that has long plagued reformers in the two controlling parties is the failure to put a stop to spending.
How big government and "big kennel" are conspiring against the sharing economy.
Keystone State alcohol regulations were among the strictest in the nation. Now the commonwealth is on the brink of fully liberalizing its liquor laws.
The Antiquities Act has become a tool for presidents to secure their legacies with special interests.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte follows prohibitionist logic to its deadly conclusion.
They paper over the fact that America enjoys extraordinary latitude when choosing how to interact with the rest of the world.
Goodbye and good riddance to the Obama administration's "Open Internet Order."
If you have to ask permission, it's a privilege, not a right. And maybe you shouldn't bother to ask.
In "All the President's Friends: Political Access and Firm Value," finance professors outline three ways government meetings may be valuable to companies.
The ownership of tax money before the government confiscates it is a moral consideration, or at least ought to be.
Demanding access to businesses' restrooms comes with costs.
Remember this the next time someone asks, "Can we trust North Korea?" The more appropriate question is whether North Korea can trust the U.S. government.
You got a permit for that ice cream machine?
It doesn't always make sense, but it's loaded with garish style.
Social justice activists hijack the problem of man-made climate change.
Steel imports are no more a threat to U.S. national security than imported sugar or lumber or tulips.
Innumerates number the ranks of politicians and bureaucrats.
It's often described by some of its victims as a license for IRS imperialism.
Safety measures help when opioid addicts won't stop.
If revenues are still going up, you haven't cut the taxes enough.
Conservatives at Berkeley and critics of the Trump administration both deserve freedom of speech.
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