Restraining Orders Do Not Prove That People Are 'Dangerous'
The Biden administration is defending a federal law that disarms Americans based on "boilerplate language" in orders that judges routinely grant.
The Biden administration is defending a federal law that disarms Americans based on "boilerplate language" in orders that judges routinely grant.
Three reasons not to ban the popular social media app
A government big enough to "solve" your minor irritants will do plenty of other stuff you don't like.
Carbon-free power isn’t free of hard choices.
A bipartisan bill backed by J.D. Vance and Sherrod Brown would include a two-member crew mandate that unions have long sought—and that wouldn't have prevented the Ohio disaster.
Plus: did the editors sing Happy Birthday to Adam Smith?
Plus: did the editors sing Happy Birthday to Adam Smith?
What at first appears to be deregulation is actually economic activism in disguise.
The Democratic president is supercharging former president Trump's failed approach to domestic manufacturing.
Plus: "No such thing" as a "harmless drag show" says university president, aggressive code enforcement in Florida, and more...
American companies and consumers "bore nearly the full cost of these tariffs because import prices increased at the same rate as the tariffs."
Plus: The editors recommend the best books for sparking interest in free market principles.
What we did for Ukrainians, we could do for other migrants too.
Biden is set to propose a new tax on unrealized investment gains and to quadruple a recently imposed tax on stock buybacks.
While Sohn’s record raises ethics and judgment questions, some attacks against her lacked merit.
When politicians manipulate industry, the public pays the price.
The president and his predecessor both tried to impose gun control by executive fiat.
DeSantis' foreign policy seems to be defined by a simple rule: Whatever Democrats do is wrong, but whatever Republicans do is right.
Plus: The editors puzzle over Donald Trump’s latest list describing his vision for America.
Both parties are complicit in the lethal policies that gave us fentanyl disguised as Percocet.
But it's exactly what they need to start talking about.
The basics of middle-class life are too expensive. But more subsidies won't help.
Politicians say they want to subsidize various industries, but they sabotage themselves by weighing the policies down with rules that have nothing to do with the plans.
The Supreme Court considers the scope of presidential power in Biden v. Nebraska and Department of Education v. Brown.
If Congress wants to spend taxpayer money on child care services, it should pass a bill authorizing that.
On Friday, the DEA unveiled a plan to restrict doctors' ability to prescribe controlled drugs over telehealth.
Plus: Texas prosecutors can't criminally charge people who help others access out-of-state abortions, food trucks fight rules banning them in 96 percent of North Carolina city, and more...
Attempts to reclassify ISPs as common carriers are unsupported by law.
What was a local conflict is shaping up as a battle between alliances.
After one year, whatever morale boost Biden’s visit provided won’t necessarily have concrete, strategic effects in Ukraine.
"If it was an emergency, why wait three years to provide the forgiveness? Why present it in a political framework, as fulfilling a campaign promise?" said one higher education expert.
Net neutrality is an unnecessary and failed policy.
Like his predecessors, the current president ignores the law when it suits him.
An escalator in a subway station is considered a "component" but a fire suppression system in the same station is considered a "finished product." Why? Because the bureaucrats say so.
Most independent contractors don’t want the PRO Act anyway.
The president reaped political benefits with his pre-election proclamation but has yet to follow through.
January's consumer price data indicates another drop in annual inflation, but the past three months might tell a different story.
Plus: a listener question on prohibition and a lightning round on the editors' favorite Super Bowl moments
A coming crackdown on $1.6 billion in unreported tips will continue the IRS' long and ugly history of targeting low-income Americans.
Instead of empowering the government to intervene, we should look more holistically at the experience of young people online.
It's a fundamental contradiction that's affected the Biden administration's economic policy for the past two years.
As Biden mentioned fentanyl deaths in his State of the Union address, Republicans called on him to close the border. But "open borders" aren't to blame for overdoses.
During the State of the Union, Biden claimed that "children who go to preschool are nearly 50 percent more likely to finish high school and go on to earn a two- or four-year degree," but evidence in favor of universal pre-k programs is lacking.
His State of the Union address sketched a foreign policy that is reckless on some points, relatively restrained on others, and utterly uninterested in any real resolution to America’s lingering military entanglements.
The Biden Administration suggests that the Title 42 case before the Supreme Court will be moot before it is decided.
Plus: Bill would make all social media platforms check IDs, appeals court rejects rent control challenge, and more...
The president's State of the Union address re-upped a tired, old promise to spend more tax dollars on less infrastructure.
His administration has contributed to the problems Biden says he wants to solve.
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