Stossel: Star Trek's William Shatner Debates Safety and Space Travel
Captain Kirk vs. John Stossel on space travel in a libertarian world.
Captain Kirk vs. John Stossel on space travel in a libertarian world.
"Juggalos are being fucked with, so we have to do something about it."
Libertarians should reject right-wing populism in all its forms.
John Stossel got an eyeglass prescription over the internet. "Bottleneckers" want that banned.
Paradoxically, government grows because of our lack of confidence in it.
The Kentucky congressman tells John Stossel why we should withdraw immediately from this "graveyard of empires."
From stadium deals to college teams Olympics, why are taxpayers forced to pony up cash for athletic ventures that don't benefit them?
In South Korea, the best teachers are paid like star athletes. Why can't U.S. schools reward talent?
The public education system is failing our kids. Here's how to fix it.
Brazil, Russia, Greece, and China were all suckers in one of the oldest scams in sports
Denial and panic aren't the only responses, folks. (Works for climate change, too.)
Remy has a few helpful tips for safely watching large orange balls of gas.
When special interest groups write regulations, consumers pay the price.
Also: GOP Congress should fix health care, taxes, and easy money.
The famed MIT linguist once praised former socialist President Hugo Chávez. How about now?
Did the president really need a teachable moment to denounce neo-Nazis?
A vital lesson, as we confront calls for more regulation and government control in all aspects of our lives.
Economist Deirdre McCloskey explains the roots of "The Great Enrichment" of the last 200 years.
New York City arrests people who travel with guns-even when they notify and follow all TSA rules and have a valid gun license from their home state.
John Stossel investigates a New York City park bathroom that cost $2 million to build.
There are 20 trillion reasons we should rein in government spending.
Economist Roberto Salinas-León on how free trade fuels prosperity on both sides of the border.
"Bottleneckers" use occupational licensing to screw competitors and innovation in the name of keeping us safe.
The libertarian congressman says the internet is poised to destroy politics as we know it.
The attorney general is an unreformed drug warrior and sinister elf.
Most folks have no idea what federal agencies do. John Stossel reports on wasteful programs like the Agriculture Department forcing farmers to let cherries rot.
How flag-waving nationalism provides cover for a destructive economic policy.
An entrepreneur has a plan to save the rhinos from poachers, but environmental groups hate his idea.
In six states, it's illegal to walk into a company-owned store and buy a car.
A new film tells the story behind the website Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently.
How the Arab world's top satirist was censored, persecuted, and driven out.
Regulations are protecting interns right out of the job market
"I take the Hippocratic oath seriously that my job is to relieve pain and suffering," says Dr. Forest Tennant, a California pain specialist who patients from across the nation are flocking to see.
A new study reminds us that the law of supply and demand still applies to labor
A California-law championed by the Star Wars actor hurts booksellers and tramples on free speech.
The GOP health plan tacitly accepts Obamacare's central premise: that governments should micromanage insurance markets.
George Burke says taking tiny hits of acid has changed his work, and his life, for the better.
Sociologist Frank Furedi on how to bring liberalism back to campus.
Five terrible, perpetually recurring arguments, debunked.
Popehat's Ken White and author John Pfaff on the need for reform.
The Kentucky senator laments that "there's very little of this attorney general, this Department of Justice, doing anything favorable towards criminal justice or towards civil liberties"
Konni Burton has emerged as the state's fiercest opponent of civil asset forfeiture.