After Pablo Escobar: Murder, Chaos, and the Failure of U.S. Drug Policy in Colombia
The Drug Policy Alliance's Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno talks about her new book.
The Drug Policy Alliance's Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno talks about her new book.
"Life is like poker," says Duke: Good choices and good outcomes don't always correlate.
A year after fiery political protests erupted on campus, we visited to find out when students think it's OK to respond to words with violence.
People applauded when government shut down the drug website Silk Road. But online drug sales increased.
Stanford political scientist Morris Fiorina says it's media and political elites who live in ideological bubbles, not regular Americans.
The new two-year budget deal will result in a $1 trillion deficit.
The cartoonist-turned-political-prognisticator talks about "master persuaders" and winning arguments in a "world where facts don't matter."
His Ghost Gunner and 3D printing are destroying the concept of gun control.
Does the news ever feel like the same thing over and over and over again?
Change Is Good: A Story of the Heroic Era of the Internet chronicles tech culture circa 1998.
System failures are a false path to limited government.
Where does the United States land on the 2017 Freedom Index? Not as high as you think.
"The Christian morality of sacrifice and altruism is wrong," says Brook, executive chairman of the Ayn Rand Institute.
The classic Hawaiian-themed song 'Mele Kalikimaka' gets a government makeover.
School choice is about extending the privileges of the upper middle class to everyone else.
Success Academy's Eva Moskowitz has demonstrated that more choice in education yields incredible outcomes.
"If all we're trying to do is prepare people for a job, why not prepare them with a job?"
Crossfit is fighting to keep the government from regulating how Americans are taught to exercise. The health of the nation may be at stake.
Both Democrats and Republicans are missing the mark when they call for the government to control the flow of information on the internet.
"I'm just sort of accidental collateral damage to a larger thing that's going on."
Keeping up with New York regulations is enough to shut down some businesses.
Should the U.S. join other countries in regulating certain speech? Can people even agree on what 'hate speech' is?
What does the future hold for libertarians?
Read bills before voting, and other ways Congress can be less terrible in 2018.
Center for American Progress' Neera Tanden and Foundation for Government Accountability's Tarran Bragdon debate government handouts at the Soho Forum.
Few things are as destructive as Socialism, Communism, Fascism...
"It's basically reassembling deck chairs on a really messy and horribly complex system": Q&A with Chris Edwards, CATO's Director of Tax Policy
Q&A with the president of Americans for Tax Reform.
Protectionism at play? Politicians say food trucks are "unfair competition" for restaurants.
It's the worst sort of social engineering and special-interest payoff via the tax code.
Just when you thought you couldn't like Moore any less.
How government almost killed the cocktail.
The New York Times drives John Stossel crazy. He wants to rip it up, because so many stories have a left-wing bias.
A legal fight involving the alt-right, Trump voters, one of Washington, D.C.'s most powerful law firms, and the website 4chan is brewing.
Academic publishers are "still acting as if the internet doesn't exist," says Michael Eisen, co-founder of the Public Library of Science.
Democrats complain GOP tax plan mostly helps rich people who already "take" wealth from others. Do they, really?
This Thanksgiving, say thank you to "private property".
Coming soon to a city near you: the misguided movement to force you out of your car and onto a bike or trolley.
Is the state violating Peggy Fontenot's First-Amendment rights?
John Stossel confronts a prostitute, a pimp and an anti-prostitution crusader.
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