Donald Trump, Peacenik President?
Historian Thaddeus Russell on Trump's libertarian foreign policy.
Historian Thaddeus Russell on Trump's libertarian foreign policy.
Trump says he wants friendly relations with any nation that wants to be friendly.
Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, and Elizabeth Nolan Brown discuss.
Trump voters were also drastically less likely than Clinton voters to say the government should do more.
Every U.S. president since 1967 has officially opposed settlements as an obstacle to peace.
A secession movement thinks (incorrectly) the state is just one big progressive playground.
Lack of ideological diversity left campuses unprepared to cope with reality.
Protests about personality not policy are bound to be counterproductive.
Trade wars and debt increases loom on the horizon.
Hopefully, federal "dysfunction and incompetence" will undermine any attempts at vengeance.
Only if you ignore how many more "likely" Democratic voters went for Trump or didn't vote at all.
Libertarian legal scholar Randy Barnett on what Trump's victory means for the Supreme Court and our constitutional rights.
While many will call this a mandate for Donald Trump, it's better read as an anti-mandate for Hillary Clinton.
Trump's win has already impacted SCOTUS.
Q&A with the Cato Institute's Michael Cannon
Clinton gives her concession speech, and the Democrats face a reckoning.
Whistling past the graveyard by climate activists at Morocco climate conference
Reason TV traveled to Albuquerque to get Johnson supporters' take on this election and their role in it, and to find out what's next for the Libertarian Party after an historic showing in the popular vote.
What every liberal who didn't see this coming needs to understand
People who don't understand how anyone could vote for Donald Trump are part of the reason Trump won.
"I think in 8 to 12 years the Libertarian Party could become the number-one party in the United States," the L.P. VP nominee says, "and I intend to participate in that."
I voted my conscience for a candidate who is for free trade, immigration, and sane drug policy. And who is anti-war. Might've voted for yours if they were too.
Non-interventionism needs a voice in 2017 and beyond.
It hurts to admit that Trump isn't alien to conservative culture - he's its near-perfect expression.
Trump is definitely a bully, but are things really that bad in American schools?
Let's warm ourselves by the embers of the 2016 election.
Fear of a Trump presidency has put a number of libertarian-ish thinkers "with her."
Whether Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump wins the election, massive challenges face the next president of the United States.
How the Clinton/Trump race to the bottom prove the thesis of The Declaration of Independents: How Libertarian Politics Can Fix What's Wrong With America.
The list stops at three for the sake of brevity, but you can assume that Clinton and Trump both have more than enough doom to spare for other liberties.
Electoral College math makes victory a challenge.
Whether Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump becomes president, American trust and confidence in government will keep dropping. And that's a big problem.
Forget Hillary, says Weld. Former New Mexico governor has "experience," "character" for the job.
And one of many go-to references for pundits trying to explain Trump
What A Face in the Crowd and Meet John Doe tell us about populism, pop culture, and fear.
Says real national debt is north of $200 trillion and screwing younger Americans from now til Doomsday.
As the presidential race drags into the home stretch, food issues don't even rate as a blip on the polls.
Is joining the new universal climate accord irreversible?
There's something heartening about Trump's gross remarks about women, Muslims, and Mexicans: he remains a free man despite uttering them.
Kmele talks race politics from Eastern Island, while Moynihan and Welch try to figure out what William Weld wrought
And will he drag the LP across the 5 percent threshold on Election Day? Nick Gillespie, Katherine Mangu-Ward, and David Weigel talk it out.
Useless pre-K programs give politicians the warm-fuzzies but don't do much to help students, new study says.
The Loyola University economist calls Reason.com's editor-in-chief a "vile" and "nasty man."
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