Obamacare: The Story So Far
A linktastic round-up of Reason's coverage of the president's health care law
A linktastic round-up of Reason's coverage of the president's health care law
Nearly a quarter century of American mistakes in Iraq
From recess appointments to warrantless cellphone searches to Obamacare, the White House lost big this term at SCOTUS.
The NFL team is not a free-market operation.
Slow licensing, high taxes, local restrictions, and a production cap will keep Washington's black market alive.
The surprising thing about the Supreme Court's decision on police searches of cell phones was its unanimity.
Everything really is bigger down in Texas, including our embarrassments.
Congress took Dr. Oz to task for offering dietary advice. One needn't have any affection for Oz to recognize the chilling effect this has on free speech.
The Colorado GOP didn't want Tancredo's tedious, one-note campaign dragging down its entire ticket.
A new book offers some decent ideas for revitalizing the Motor City—but it doesn't go far enough.
Nat Hentoff gets his due, Chris Evans hops a train, and Michael Bay does what he does all over again.
The only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history.
The alliance with Egypt's military dictatorship shows the hypocrisy of President Barack Obama.
It recognizes that there is no one answer to fixing education in America.
It's time for the former secretary of state to learn Economics 101.
A Senate hearing highlights irrational hostility toward e-cigarettes.
Several recent decisions have made tracking the health law's outcomes more difficult.
Both sides seem all-too-capable of repeating the same mistakes again.
The beef ISIS has is with the government in Iraq, not the U.S.
Whether in the laws he signed or the cavalier way that he disregards them, the Obama presidency is far from over
For visitors to Denver, legally buying marijuana is easy, but legally smoking it is hard.
But thinking that more federal aid will make college affordable is like believing that a dog can catch its tail if it goes faster.
Legislators and activists just don't trust adults to navigate issues of consent without them.
A new Institute for Justice report on food freedom, which I co-authored, makes clear that your right to grow, raise, produce, buy, sell, share, cook, eat, and drink the foods you want is under attack.
All signs tell us that incumbents should be grabbed by their lapels and shoved to the curb-but most won't be.
How California Democrats are trying to get into your bedroom.
Every politician knows when it comes to the budget, people can accept being lied to. It's the truth they can't abide.
Searching the world for monsters to destroy will only end up destroying us.
From Iraq to SecureDrop, WikiLeaks remains an important tool for free speech, information, and action.
Machines can free us up to focus on activities that we enjoy more.
The online powerhouse is being compared to thugs because it wants you to pay less for ebooks.
A ruling against warrantless tracking assumes that people don't know how cellphones work.
If the European Court of Justice labels obesity a disability, it would be binding throughout the European Union.
His stunning loss was built on a terrible record of big-government conservatism at its worst.
It is a sound, even noble, foreign policy goal, one that can help us avoid further sacrifice of American blood and treasure.
Obamacare problems? The administration will fix them later.
Technological innovation sometimes makes laws obsolete.
For libertarians it may seem like winter is always coming
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