Rep. Thomas Massie on Shakedowns, Cronyism—and Why He's Sticking With the GOP
"I didn't come to Washington to make friends."
"I didn't come to Washington to make friends."
The way Congress crafts spending bills has "effectively disenfranchised almost 300 million Americans."
The most libertarian legal analyst on cable news dishes on Brett Kavanaugh, the end of his GOP, and his forthcoming new show.
The Peruvian economist says blockchain technologies and social media will transform the planet by securing property rights.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
The Suicide of the West author explains his anti-Trumpism, evolution on culture-war issues, and growing attraction to libertarianism.
William F. Buckley Jr.'s "Firing Line" returns to PBS to elevate political discourse about the important policy issues facing the nation.
Peterson: "SJWs" evolved from Marxism.
The LP candidate for the governor of New York wants to cut spending, legalize everything, and give people hope.
In Bad Blood, Wall Street Journal reporter John Carreyrou explains why Silicon Valley's mystique makes suckers out of billionaires.
Nick Gillespie talks to former president of the ACLU Nadine Strossen about the difficulties and importance of free speech.
The CNN host and best-selling novelist comes clean about his politics, why Hillary Clinton lost, and how his training in alternative media gives him a leg up.
Trump's secretary of education says she's "undeterred."
Q&A with journalist Nina Teicholz
Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron explains why taking out cartel kingpins demonstrates the folly of prohibition.
Lessons from Jordan Peterson's book 12 Rules for Life
UCLA Law Professor Adam Winkler on his new book We the Corporations
Boehner openly despised the libertarian Republican from Michigan but actually allowed him and others to debate and vote freely on spending bills.
The firebrand Michigan congressman unloads on the GOP leadership's unwillingness to shrink government's size, scope, and spending.
Why the "conscious capitalist" thinks we are headed for "a consumer utopia."
More tech folks call themselves libertarian than anything else. So why are they afraid to speak up at work?
Candace Owens took "the red pill," and now gives "red pills" to millions through her online videos.
Executive Producers Joe Weisberg and Joel Fields discuss their critically acclaimed show, ideology, and how technology is ushering in the golden era of television.
Pope Francis is part of the problem, nuclear energy is part of the solution, and libertarians need to admit that not every regulation will turn us into Venezuela.
The attack on fatty foods, in favor of carbohydrates, contributed to rising rates of obesity and diabetes.
Wired's co-founder talks about the "Neobiological Revolution" and what happens when computer science and engineering meet evolution.
The 2016 Libertarian presidential candidate on "Aleppo," Donald Trump's unexpected good points, and why Hillary Clinton's trolls were worse than Russian ones.
The Silicon Valley entrepreneur says cryptocurrencies, virtual reality, and mobile devices are helping individuals escape failed institutions.
The Drug Policy Alliance's Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno talks about her new book.
"Life is like poker," says Duke: Good choices and good outcomes don't always correlate.
Stanford political scientist Morris Fiorina says it's media and political elites who live in ideological bubbles, not regular Americans.
Change Is Good: A Story of the Heroic Era of the Internet chronicles tech culture circa 1998.
"If all we're trying to do is prepare people for a job, why not prepare them with a job?"
"I'm just sort of accidental collateral damage to a larger thing that's going on."
What does the future hold for libertarians?
"It's basically reassembling deck chairs on a really messy and horribly complex system": Q&A with Chris Edwards, CATO's Director of Tax Policy
Q&A with the president of Americans for Tax Reform.
Academic publishers are "still acting as if the internet doesn't exist," says Michael Eisen, co-founder of the Public Library of Science.
Democrats complain GOP tax plan mostly helps rich people who already "take" wealth from others. Do they, really?
She started the first secular, pro-market party in Egypt. Then the government sent the secret police after her.
Q&A with Caitlin Long, a former Morgan Stanley managing director, cryptocurrency enthusiast, and recent convert to Austrian economics.
Comma.ai aims to bring plug-and-play autonomy to the masses.
Lenore Skenazy, Jonathan Haidt, Peter Gray, and Daniel Shuchman launch, Let Grow, a non-profit devoted to promoting better policies for raising children.
Q&A with economist Gabriel Calzada Alvarez on trade barriers, higher education, and bringing free markets to the region.
Columbia's Philip Hamburger says this "monarchical" system of government grew in power just as blacks and women saw an expansion of their voting rights.
The famed artist has a new public art project going up in New York City, which coincides with his debut feature film, Human Flow.
Is rape culture out of control, or have we entered a new era of "sexual McCarthyism?"
The former fast food restaurant CEO says a $15 wage floor steals opportunities from entry-level workers.