Yes, the Government Is Coming for Your Gas Stove
State and local governments are moving forward with bans on gas stoves in new residences.
State and local governments are moving forward with bans on gas stoves in new residences.
The wildly popular podcaster is still "politically homeless" but says leaving California and having a kid have improved her life immensely.
"We are adamant that the hiring committee...not extend a job offer to Dr. Yoel Inbar," reads the petition.
It's wrong to use human beings as pawns in an apparent political stunt.
Rent control is getting a rhetorical makeover from progressive policy makers.
Wired's "senior maverick" on his new book of accumulated wisdom, backlash against tech, and why the future still looks bright.
Golden State municipalities are finally overturning their anti-cruising ordinances.
In California, officials are pushing pension funds to divest from fossil fuels, firearms manufacturers, and tobacco companies. Red states are retaliating. This is madness.
California lawmakers and President Joe Biden seem determined to help fast-food workers by eliminating their jobs.
City Councilmember Curren Price is indicted for steering favors to affordable housing developers who were bribing his wife.
And it undercuts energy efficiency investments already made by millions of Californians.
Robert Poole's effort to defend exclusionary zoning falls prey to a combination of logical fallacies and factual error.
California recently enacted legislation that invalidates single-family zoning, as an effort to increase housing supply. Other alternatives would be wiser.
The man behind 3D-printed guns talks about beating the ATF, his abiding interest in cyberpunk culture, and what comes next for "practical anarchy."
California’s governor insists his “28th Amendment” would leave the right to arms “intact.”
Often, it can be exactly the opposite.
Plus: A listener question considers the pros and cons of the libertarian focus on political processes rather than political results.
The Rubin Report host makes the case for the Florida governor, who courageously defied lockdowns but is quick to use the state to punish corporations he doesn't like.
California homeowners are finding out that government-imposed market distortions cannot be maintained forever.
Plus: Debt ceiling deal passes House, Congress wants to childproof the internet, lactation consultant licensing law is unconstitutional, and more...
Sometimes he calls for freedom, and sometimes he preaches something darker.
When the state won't shade you, buy a hat.
Start by looking at the government policies that have made it worse.
After getting lucky for his first few years in office, Newsom now faces his first major budgetary crisis. How he responds will show a lot about his leadership skills.
The Department of Justice is now intervening on behalf of the Orange County, California, group's right to distribute food at its resource center in Santa Ana.
If you don't like San Francisco, that's fine, but don't tell tall tales about it.
To address an "unpaid debt bubble," the proposed law would dictate contract terms and require regulators to intervene in commercial disputes.
The transit systems we're supposed to hop aboard ultimately operate as jobs programs for government workers.
There is no demonstrable link between alcohol delivery laws and our heightened pandemic drinking.
California’s experience combatting wage theft has been a headache for employers without much in the way of restitution for workers.
Activists who would like to see more housing built and people who build housing for a living would seem to be natural allies. A new bill in the California Legislature is driving them apart.
Today, the Lone Star state counts 90 homeless people per every 100,000 residents. In California, the problem is almost five times as bad.
Contra the famous quotation from Oliver Wendell Holmes, there's nothing particularly civilized about the way our governments spend the money we provide.
The lawsuit blames the companies for stoking "anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, and suicidal ideation."
Plus: DeSantis does better than Trump in swing-state poll, majority say abortion pill should remain available, and more...
At least until all the gasoline is gone.
The state's labor groups have explicitly said their policy is about protecting jobs from new technology.
This total is 2.5 times the state's annual budget.
A 9-year-old backed out of a deal to sell her pet goat for slaughter. Local officials and sheriff's deputies used the power of the state to force her to go through with it.
Teachers unions, police unions, and prison guard unions have inordinate control over public policy, and California is suffering the consequences.
Carbon-free power isn’t free of hard choices.