Trump's Chaos Cabinet
Plus: a listener asks the editors about fluoride in the water supply.
Plus: a listener asks the editors about fluoride in the water supply.
Establishment hawks will be running the State Department and National Security Council, but Trump has peppered in some antiestablishment mavericks too.
Under the broad terms of a 1934 federal law, the president has the authority to seize emergency control of almost any electronic device in the country.
"I was not invited to participate in any way."
"Today I'm suspending my presidential campaign and offering my full support to Vice President Joe Biden."
Politicians across the political spectrum embrace UBI-style relief to ease the pain of the coming coronavirus-induced recession.
The Hawaiian representative's two delegates will no longer be enough to earn her a spot in the upcoming CNN/Univision debate in Phoenix.
"Google is not now, nor (to the Court's knowledge) has it ever been, an arm of the United States government," wrote District Judge Stephen Wilson.
Plus: Libertarian Party results, Bloomberg's bad showing, Gabbard gets one delegate, California targets porn performers, and more...
The anti-war candidate's scoring of a delegate in American Samoa might earn her a spot on in the next Democratic debate.
"If a consenting adult wants to engage in sex work, that is their right," Gabbard says.
"I like a lot of what she has to say," the former Libertarian Party presidential candidate tells Reason.
The lawsuit might be good politics, but it's bad for free speech.
"I come before you to make a stand for the center," said Gabbard in a statement.
She's not a libertarian, but Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is shaking up the race for the Democratic nomination.
Plus: Trump tries to expand trade war, new findings on sexual harrassment and physical attraction, and more...
Plus: Laura Loomer loses again, no refugees resettled last month, and more...
At tonight's debate, Gabbard continued her laser-like focus on the need to end America's overseas wars.
"Your statement is defamatory, and we demand that you retract it immediately," Gabbard's lawyer wrote in a letter.
Jacob Hornberger becomes the latest back-to-basics libertarian to enter the Libertarian presidential race.
Promoters and detractors alike are not thinking through how unlikely it would be for Gabbard to seek and win the Green Party nomination, let alone come anywhere close to Jill Stein's totals from 2016.
Plus: New York City bans foie gras, new Reason podcasts, and more...
People who voted for Donald Trump have far more favorable views of Gabbard than those who voted for Hillary Clinton. And because the state has an open primary, that could be significant.
The Reason Roundtable analyzes an establishment smear against a foreign policy heretic, and laments the bipartisan panic against online speech.
Gabbard called Clinton "the queen of warmongers, embodiment of corruption, and personification of the rot that has sickened the Democratic Party for so long."
"She's a favorite of the Russians and they have a bunch of sites and bots and other ways of supporting her so far."
Fellow Democratic candidates took aim over how Warren plans to pay for all the "free" stuff she's promising, her policy in the Middle East, and her thoughts on Trump's Twitter account.
"As president I will end these regime change wars."
The article ignores Gabbard's arguments for a less interventionist foreign policy, preferring to speculate about foreigners and fascists.
Stossel's full interview with Tulsi Gabbard covering war, drugs, free healthcare, free college, the minimum wage, and more.
“As though the only way that we can relate with other countries in the world is by bombing them.”
Tulsi Gabbard and Stossel discuss war, drug legalization, and government spending.
Gabbard has previously called the Trump administration "Saudi Arabia's bitch."
Her chumming around with the worst dictators is troubling.
Climate change is a problem, but the end of the world is not scheduled for 2030.
The climate of opinion has changed so dramatically that Democrats are politically obliged to support reform.
"The bottom line is, when you were in a position to make a difference and an impact in these people's lives, you did not."
The presidential hopeful alleges the company violated her First Amendment rights when it suspended her campaign advertising site for 6 hours.
It's refreshing to see many conservatives abandon their kneejerk support for militarism, and nice to watch Joe Biden be held accountable for his support for the Iraq blunder.
"The outsized power that the political parties hold can often be used in the wrong way to squelch our democracy and dissenting voices even within our own parties," says Gabbard.
Tulsi Gabbard's defense of non-interventionism was electrifying. Tonight's fight between Biden and Sanders over capitalism and socialism will be, too.
"If we had to pick one of them to be our president, I think she would be giving us the best chance for bringing about peace."
"Millions of people have been arrested for the possession or use of marijuana. Many can't afford bail-further punishing those who are poor," says Gabbard.
Plus: Will Wilkinson on "abolishing billionaires," and what's really going on with YouTube?
Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.
This modal will close in 10