Campaign Finance Curbs and Bipartisan Censorship
Censorship is a bipartisan affair.
Get in the weeds, not the sensationalism
The deputy speaker of the Knesset takes a hard line on individual freedom-and Gaza.
What people are really after is not jobs, but the incomes that come with them.
The FDA's growing crackdown on added food ingredients just doesn't add up.
Haven't we all suffered enough with this unhindered access to affordable goods, exotic merchandise, and cool gadgets?
ISIS is a brutal group, but Congress must insist on playing a central role in the decision-making process.
Rapid biomedical progress will soon make epidemics ancient history
Zoe Kazan and Daniel Radcliffe in love and confusion, and two unconquerable codgers on an Icelandic adventure.
U.S. involvement in World War I lasted just a year and a half. But government today uses its leavings to threaten Americans' freedom.
Government-sponsored sweetheart deals for the solar industry are increasing energy costs for low-income Americans.
Obama's loyalty lies with the spooks, not with the people who elected him.
CIA Director John Brennan admitted his agents spied on senators. Then the president said he still has confidence in Brennan.
Will they provide legal innovation, or merely business-friendly regulation?
U.S. Border Patrol agents are routinely harassing American citizens who just want to drive home from work.
Another day, another horrific story about the police killing a beloved family pet.
Seeking to shorten "draconian" sentences, the attorney general faces opposition from his underlings.
What we can learn from the Great War on its centennial.
It wasn't a national nightmare; it was fun. We can do it again.
Win or lose Halbig, Obamacare wars will continue.
There are many signs that Putin's billionaire pals are already chafing at the costs of his adventurism.
Is there any room for optimism on the immigration front?
Central planning is replacing individual choice.
Highlights from the anti-pot files of The New York Times
In practice, licenses to carry guns in public have allowed law-abiding citizens to take steps they see as essential for their safety, without putting their fellow citizens in danger.
He backs strict enforcement of petty laws that disproportionately hurt the poor and marginalized.
We're unlocking unthinkable amounts of capital and lawmakers stand in the way.
We have either an incompetent secretary of state or a momentous shift in Middle East policy.
Urbanization, forest, and agricultural trends point in a more hopeful direction
California tries to lift the bucket it's standing in.
A spaced-out blockbuster and a problematic tribute to the great James Brown.
As hospitals and courts collude, pregnant women are being excluded from fundamental decisions about how they give birth.
Most people don't spend much time thinking about government policies, which is why bad ones can persist for years or decades.
Two thirds of Americans live within a hundred miles of a border or coast, where feds are allowed to violate more of their rights
Barack Obama has demonstrated a propensity for rejecting his oath and doing damage to our fabric of liberty that cannot easily be undone by a successor.
Justin Amash's expected victory next week will prove his conservative district likes the congressman's libertarian brand just fine.
Activists obsessed with "conflict of interest" in science make life more difficult for doctors, and for patients who want cures.
Don't these government officials have something better to do?
The Kentucky senator's forfeiture reform bill would curtail legal theft.
The most obvious legal interpretation of the health law is the plain meaning of its legislative language.
Rick Perry likes to speculate what the Gipper would do, but he should look at what he DID do.
Putting economies on an energy diet is not the way to fight climate change.
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