'70s Pulp Violence Returns in Cinemax's Quarry
Book series becomes television drama.
Freaking out over the commander-in-chief forum.
Innocent until the government makes a mistake.
Profiles in courage and '60s pop delirium.
The Electronic Communications Privacy Act was passed in 1986.
Most voters do not agree that unauthorized residents pose an intolerable threat.
The president's signature law is failing spectacularly.
Opponents and proponents of folding money agree that the stuff protects you from the state-but they differ about the value of that protection.
JFK and the Reagan Revolution argues that America can return to prosperity by looking to the Kennedy-Reagan model of income tax cuts and a strong, stable dollar.
From the public option to stiffer penalties, Obamacare supporters won't admit government is the problem.
The agency says the psychoactive leaf must be banned because it has never been approved.
The GOP would be saddled with responsibility for his behavior.
Some states bar people from harvesting dead animals. But Montana has gotten good results from lifting its ban.
Hey, Donald Glover's back on television.
Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender in a deceptive heart-tugger, and Kate Mara on the trail of yet another sci-fi cyborg.
Good news on the pension reform front
A federal appeals court finds little evidence that the burdens imposed by sex offender registries are justified.
Libertarians Gary Johnson and William Weld suggest there are limits to presidential power.
Does the Fourth Amendment protect against unreasonable searches before the fact?
The NSA opportunistically hoards and deploys powerful bugs that make everyone less secure online.
What contributed to the revival of the U.S. brewing industry between the 1990s and the present?
When humans focus their innovative talents on the task of defeating control freaks' pronouncements, freedom wins.
Records show that Mylan spent more than $2 million on Washington lobbying in 2015.
Rodrigo Duterte echoes American drug warriors.
In order to appease far-left voters, she's abandoning economic literacy.
Understanding the political philosophy of the abolitionist leader.
The feds are bailing out dairy producers. Here's why that's a terrible and wasteful mistake.
Documentary takes viewers inside the place called Buddhafield.
"Science isn't self-correcting, it's self-destructing."
Things have never been better, despite doomsday prophecies from some environmentalists.
San Francisco lawmakers want to put the squeeze on tech companies.
Fresh new adventures in low-budget horror.
Don't be spooked by exaggerated view of threats against the U.S.
New study ranks states on economic and personal freedom.
Peter Thiel's funding of speech-chilling privacy litigation is totally misguided, people.
Gary Johnson and Bill Weld join John Stossel on Friday at 9pm on the Fox Business Network.
Forget stories of restrictive laws; predators have easy access to weapons, but honest people can get into trouble for defending themselves.
What's a voter to think about whether we are experiencing peace and prosperity? It's not exactly a clear-cut answer on either front.
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