War Counsel
Obama shops for Libya advice that lets him ignore the law.
New studies say reducing infection rates promotes liberalization.
Big environmental groups were for fracking before they were against it.
We're still living in the wake left by Cold War civil defense hysteria.
How California prison guards became the country's most powerful union
Two privacy cases hit us where we live.
Why does the nonpartisan, good-government consensus sound so radical?
Does it show a way forward for nuclear power?
In the Keystone State's juvenile justice scandal, money changed everything.
The Office of the Solicitor General has traditionally defended the government. But should it?
The Internet's vulnerability to attacks has been exaggerated.
Despite what you may have read, it's safer to be a police officer today than it has been in 35 years.
Excluding inactivity from the Commerce Clause still leaves Congress with far too much power.
The Indiana governor's escape from prison taught him the importance of being tough on drug users.
Will the Middle East uprisings succeed?
The irresistible force of school reform meets the immovable object of teachers unions.
Unemployment rates and other useless measurements
After Congress fails to regulate greenhouse gases, the president hands the job to the EPA.
The prosecutor who wrongly put a paraplegic in prison wants to be a judge.
Poor accounting rules and flagrant irresponsibility have sped up the states' day of reckoning.
America is spending more money on education while producing worse outcomes.
The more we spend on higher education, the more we spend on higher education.
At a climate change conference in Cancun, negotiators agreed to meet again. That's pretty much all they agreed on.
A social psychology study explores the formation of the libertarian personality.
The Republicans have retaken the House, but that doesn't mean you should expect the government to get any smaller.
If lawmakers are serious about saving lives, they should focus on impairment, not alcohol.