School's Out
Plus: Campus echoes of Occupy Wall Street, Trump's presidential immunity claims, plans to undo the Fed's independence, and more...
Plus: Campus echoes of Occupy Wall Street, Trump's presidential immunity claims, plans to undo the Fed's independence, and more...
In March, Gov. Greg Abbott signed an executive order demanding that colleges crack down on antisemitic speech.
Let's just call this what it is: another gimmick for Congress to escape its own budget limits and avoid having a conversation about tradeoffs.
It supposedly bans financing terrorism, but that's already illegal. It's really a power grab for the secretary of the treasury.
Plus: Masking protesters, how Google Search got so bad, Columbia's anti-apartheid protests of the '80s, and more...
Plus: Supreme Court takes up ghost guns, Abbott takes on trans teachers, the literalism of Civil War, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors to steel man the case for the Jones Act, an antiquated law that regulates maritime commerce in U.S. waters.
House Speaker Mike Johnson worked with President Biden to push through a $95 billion foreign military aid package—most of which goes to the American military-industrial complex.
Plus: Homework liberation in Poland, Orthodox rabbi tells students to flee Columbia, toddler anarchy, and more...
Plus: Skirting New York residency requirements, undisclosed AI use in documentaries, prison commissary markups, and more...
The university has a history of suppressing speech from both sides of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Elica Le Bon, an attorney and Iranian-American activist, talks about Iran's recent strike on Israel on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Plus: Europoor discourse, NPR's woke CEO, a forgotten tech panic, and more...
Many of the Washington hawks calling for war with Iran had sworn up and down that more pressure was not a path to war.
Plus: Time to ax NPR's funding, African migrants get mad at New York City, Gavin Newsom gets smart, and more...
It's a test of the unofficial coalition that's effectively ruling the House right now.
Plus: How matzo gets made, TikTok employees reporting to Beijing-based ByteDance, espionage concerns in Germany, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors for examples of tasks the government does well (yikes).
Plus: Trump's trial, MMA fighter trots out Mises, the forgotten canceling of Brendan Eich, and more...
Washington quietly funded Israeli-Iranian proxy wars for years. Now American men and women are directly involved.
President Biden said that we will “do all we can to protect Israel’s security” after Israel killed an Iranian general.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for examples of left-leaning thinkers who also hold libertarian ideas.
Plus: IDF scandal, Latin America's "small penis club," Havana syndrome, and more...
The U.S. is dispensing munitions to Ukraine and Israel faster than they can be replaced.
The U.S. is dispensing munitions to Ukraine and Israel faster than they can be replaced.
"It's just an effort to keep everybody safe and make sure nobody has any ill will," he claimed.
The psychologist and bestselling author argues that Harvard's free speech policy was so "selectively prosecuted that it became a national joke."
Plus: NYC squatters, sex differences and chess ability, trouble at the ACLU, and more...
Teaneck already had tensions over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A real estate sale caused it to snap.
An "uncompromising" journal cancels an essay for failing to say the right things.
In his State of the Union address, Biden promised indefinite U.S. involvement in Ukraine, Gaza, Yemen, and beyond.
The "uncommitted" protest campaign had a strong showing in Minnesota, but underperformed in other states.
Plus: More reactions to the Supreme Court's other decision in the Trump ballot disqualification case, D.C.'s continued minimum wage confusion, California's primary elections, and more...
"I have a history of being the only vote that was a 'no,'" the Kentucky Republican tells Reason.
The airlift avoids the real problems causing starvation.
Eli Lake of The Free Press debates author Jeremy Hammond at The Soho Forum.
Students should be able to peacefully protest events, but they shouldn't disrupt a speaker or assault attendees.
Plus: Brooklyn communists, Shenzhen Costco, Chernobyl mythbusting, and more...
The Secret Service’s strange reaction to the U.S. airman who lit himself on fire outside the Israeli embassy.
Plus: Adderall shortages, infrastructure lessons, Kanye West, and more...
Contrary to popular belief, ideas can in fact be killed. And that reality has important implications for how we should handle various conflicts, including those involving Israel and Ukraine.
Plus: Catholic funeral for transgender activist, Donald Trump's props, deep tech in El Segundo, and more...
Listening to the sounds of war at the site of the October 7 Hamas attack.
It's the right thing to do. But Western and Arab nations should also open doors to those currently trapped in Gaza.
The Senate's $95 billion aid bill would only throw more good money after bad.
Plus: Moscow subway stations, climate activists souping and glueing, Rachel Dolezal's plight, and more...
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