How COVID-19 Is Spreading School Choice
The growing movement to fund students rather than government monopolies
The growing movement to fund students rather than government monopolies
When it comes to criminal justice and abortion, Barrett and Ginsburg may have far more in common than conservatives and progressives seem to realize.
The Libertarian presidential nominee is polling at 5 percent. Who are her followers?
The documentary Coup 53 explores how a seemingly easy regime change wrecked U.S. foreign policy for decades.
Ten Global Trends Every Smart Person Should Know documents progress and explains why it happens.
Bridget Phetasy on why Trump and Biden fail to inspire and how new media are reshaping politics.
"When terror is seen as justified, I think it's inevitable that something terrible is going to happen," journalist Nancy Rommelmann told Nick Gillespie last week.
In The End of Gender, Debra Soh stands up for impartial research—and for LGBTQ rights.
An interview with the directors behind the breakout political documentary about a Texas camp for aspiring leaders
Fox News host's The Plus is a funny yet serious argument about making politics matter less in your life.
The Fifth Column podcaster is done with cancel culture, identity politics, and political orthodoxy.
In his new book, Apocalypse Never: Why Environmental Alarmism Hurts Us All, Shellenberger argues that science doesn't support doomsayers' claims.
The Brown University economist and outspoken critic of Black Lives Matter discusses George Floyd, social progress, and the state of political discourse.
How to stop police killings and enact real, lasting reforms.
Pro-democracy legislator Charles Mok explains what China's new national security law means for dissidents and the future of the city.
Princeton's Omar Wasow talks about the complicated effects of civil rights demonstrations, police brutality, and racial fears on public policy.
Barton Gellman's new book is a riveting account of exposing NSA excesses to the light of the day.
The longtime activist believes in open immigration, free trade, ending the drug war, and bringing all troops back home immediately.
Ludwig von Mises is “my hero,” and free markets have nothing to do with efficiency, says Ogilvy ad man Rory Sutherland.
Is COVID-19 bringing the mythology of America as a nation of immigrants to an end? Q&A with The New York Times' Jia Lynn Yang
The Libertarian presidential hopeful makes his case for your vote.
Aerospace pioneer and SpaceShipOne designer Burt Rutan on the dawn of private space travel.
Health care expert Avik Roy says that even without widespread testing, it's time to reopen schools and allow healthy, younger employees to go back to work.
An emergency room doctor talks about working the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic.
Economic historian Phillip W. Magness on classical liberalism and abolition, Abraham Lincoln's contested legacy, and why history matters in contemporary politics.
Education researcher Kerry McDonald sees this crisis as an opportunity to experiment with self-directed learning.
Q&A with Duke's Michael C. Munger, who also believes that big cities will see rationing and that higher education will never be the same.
The renowned science writer talks about pandemics, Chinese authoritarianism, Brexit, and why the freedom to innovate must not be quashed.
The Kentucky congressman who insisted Congress record its vote on history's biggest spending bill is unapologetic and outspoken about limited government.
Reason's Ronald Bailey on flattening the curve without killing freedom.
A Q&A with Alex Tabarrok, an economist at George Mason University and blogger at Marginal Revolution
DIY biologists propose creating a public domain SARS-CoV-2 vaccine with $25,000 in funding.
The biotech entrepreneur and Silicon Valley visionary wants mandatory quarantines and a "digital Dunkirk" rescue operation.
Is a new stimulus package the right response to a pandemic?
What would Sanders' vision of democratic socialism mean for the country?
The granddaughter of Cuban and Hungarian refugees says that political, economic, cultural, and sexual freedom are all intertwined and non-negotiable.
The hacking wunderkind thinks Big Tech's approach won't work. He built a $999 autonomous driving system that runs on a smartphone.
Political hypocrisy on school choice needs to be exposed, says Reason Foundation's Corey DeAngelis.
Kendra Espinoza's daughters rely on a state-supported scholarship program to attend the school of their choice.
Historian Amity Shlaes talks about the last time a president massively expanded the federal government to help people.
Prof. Erik Nielson says in Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics, and Guilt in America rappers everywhere are not getting a fair shake in the courtroom.
John Tierney and Roy F. Baumeister want to defeat The Power of Bad.
In the panic to ban and regulate electronic cigarettes, media and politicians are ignoring the benefits of vaping.
One of Brexit's architects says leaving the EU is a victory for free trade and decentralization and warns that a Corbyn victory will destroy the U.K.'s future.
The George Mason economist partnered with Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal's Zach Weinersmith to offer a thoughtful look at immigration policy in comic form.
“The evidence of his impeachable behavior at this point, in my view, is overwhelming," says the Fox News analyst.
The legendary jurist and champion of "originalism" who withdrew his name from Supreme Court consideration weighs in on Donald Trump's impeachment, Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, and his upcoming PBS series on the Constitution.
Outrage mobs kept his new movie "American Dharma" out of theaters for a year.