Don't Freak Out About Falling Fertility Rates
There's an easy way to make more Americans: immigration.
There's an easy way to make more Americans: immigration.
White men and black women were the most likely to endorse America moving beyond the Dem-GOP binary.
"A supposed modern culture of instant gratification has not stemmed the march of improvement."
Young Americans need a fairer, simpler tax code, but there are reasons to worry Congress will screw this up.
Nick Gillespie interviews Lisa De Pasquale about her new parody book on outrage culture.
Techno-panic finds a new target in Jean Twenge's "Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?"
Millennials may have mixed views of capitalism, but they hold socialism in even lower regard.
A new generation faces the familiar dilemmas.
Nick Gillespie tells Australia's "The Rational Rise" why he's bullish about the prospects for freedom in the 21st century.
The co-host of Last Podcast on the Left talks about Millennial libertarians, gun rights in New York City, and our fascination with serial killers.
Nearly half of young working-class whites do not identify with any religious affiliation.
In the spirit of an interracial, equal-opportunity orgy of bougie-ness, check out these tunes and videos.
The post-millennial generation starts turning 18 this year, while the eldest members of the post-Gen Z cohort are starting to be born.
College students rather than deans are calling for less speech and expression. That should worry us all.
For all the things establishment conservatives think millennials should be against, they have a hard time articulating what young people should be for, and what that has to do with the Republican Party.
Tens of thousands marched through Washington, D.C., today. As usual, media outlets paid the protest minimal attention.
Instapundit Glenn Reynolds lays out reform that will maintain antidiscrimination law while taming its excesses.
Nick Gillespie, Shikha Dalmia, Avik Roy, and Charles C.W. Cooke talk about immmigration, limited government, and cosmopolitanism.
The cost of today's and tomorrow's lavish public pensions and entitlements will be borne by younger Americans.
Conservative intellectuals are pushing a turn that will alienate millennials, not secure the GOP's white base.
Hey kids! You're paying for entitlements you won't get, subsidizing health care for old people who are rich, and fighting senseless wars.
Millennials are rightly skeptical of an economic system that rewards politically connected cronies rather than innovation and hard work.
They are out of step with millennials and America.
Asked about our biggest problems, the most common answer among young black voters was racism, while Hispanics said immigration, Asians said education, and whites said terrorism/homeland security.
If you're under 50 and worried about the 2016 election, automation, and your future, listen up!
Clinton has been going full-force Millennial Whisperer recently, after learning that she's losing young voters to Gary Johnson and Jill Stein. Why it won't help.
Economist, heal thyself
Being even more condescending toward them probably won't work.
Only if you think merely tripling per capita GDP by 2100 is poverty
The major-party candidates are about preserving the past, not creating a bold new future.
Gary Johnson is making a play with Millennials in a proportion that Clinton and Trump can't touch
"The election is a complete joke."
Fred Smith of the Competitive Enterprise Institute & Center for the Advancement of Capitalism wants business owners to champion free markets better.
Millennials are making different lifestyle choices, and that's fine.
As the Republican National Convention winds to a close, Trump's lack of support among young GOPers has never been more obvious.
Two other national polls put the Libertarian's support at 11% and 8%
Libertarian is competitive among independents and Millennials in two new polls, while doing his best to date against a rising Jill Stein
Beyond drawing nearly 10%, the Libertarian is disproportionally attracting independents and Millennials, despite low name recognition
'Libertarianism for Beginners' was born in seeing the Soviet Union collapse.
Expanding a retirement program that's not fiscally solvent is no way to treat the young.
Both the social-justice left and the alt-right view the world primarily through identity politics.
They're also into Australia, the U.K., the U.S., and the former Axis powers, but not so hot for Israel or South Africa.
Exclusive excerpt from Government Gone Wild: How D.C. Politicians Are Taking You for a Ride-and What You Can Do About It.
Seize the means of production? Meh. Millennials love private enterprise-as long as you don't call it "capitalism."
Young people entering the workforce without a degree or a "rent-seeking" license face low wages, if they can even find a job.
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