Was Amazon 'Free to Ignore' White House Demands That It Suppress Anti-Vaccine Books?
The Biden administration's interference with bookselling harks back to a 1963 Supreme Court case involving literature that Rhode Island deemed dangerous.
The Biden administration's interference with bookselling harks back to a 1963 Supreme Court case involving literature that Rhode Island deemed dangerous.
The pardons freed no prisoners, but the White House says they will ease the burden of a criminal record.
At nearly every turn, the infrastructure package opted for policies that limited supplies, hiked prices, added paperwork, and grew government.
The White House cited the extraordinarily low recidivism rates among those released and the savings to taxpayers in its veto threat.
Amtrak has historically received $2 billion in federal subsidies each year. Under Republicans' "draconian" cuts, they'd receive over $5 billion next year.
Years ago, when interest rates were low, calls for the federal government to exercise fiscal restraint were dismissed. That was unwise.
Congress is being asked to borrow more money to fund broadband access and other pet projects. Only about $9 billion would be spent on natural disaster recovery efforts.
The notion that COVID-19 came from a lab was once touted as misinformation. But now the FBI, the Energy Department, and others agree with Paul.
Presidential administrations from both parties keep trying to make "place-based" economic development work.
The justices agreed to consider whether the Biden administration's efforts to suppress online "misinformation" were unconstitutional.
Plus: A listener asks for the editors’ advice on how to spend his money.
When talking heads say “no evidence,” they mean “no smoking-gun proof.”
The appeals court narrowed a preliminary injunction against such meddling but confirmed the threat that it poses to freedom of speech.
Plus: A listener question concerning porn verification laws.
Multiple administrations have allowed senior officials to use alias email accounts. The practice undermines the Freedom of Information Act and encourages secrecy.
The lack of oversight and the general absence of a long-term vision is creating inefficiency, waste, and red ink as far as the eye can see.
A new national emergency declaration will allow for the creation of an outbound investment screening system targeting Americans' investments in China.
A White House panel says the FBI's internal control over Section 702 databases are "insufficient to ensure compliance and earn the public's trust."
The federal budget deficit has exploded under Biden's watch, and he can no longer pretend otherwise.
It may be a good idea in theory, but it's probably an impractical pipe dream.
At a minimum, the national debt should be smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver.
Plus: A listener question cross-examines prior Reason Roundtable discussions surrounding immigration, economic growth, and birthrates.
The deal will freeze non-military discretionary spending this year and allow a 1 percent increase in 2024.
The U.S. tax system is extremely progressive, even compared to European countries—whose governments rely on taxing the middle class.
In 2019, discretionary spending was $1.338 trillion—or some $320 billion less than what Republicans want that side of the budget to be.
An impasse created by years of politicized, myopic decision making in Washington is pushing the federal government ever closer to a dangerous cliff.
A responsible political class would significantly reform the organization. Instead, they will likely continue to give it more power.
The Constitution was intended to preserve state sovereignty, not create an all-powerful central government.
Throughout the pandemic, the CDC was in constant contact with Facebook, vetting what users were allowed to say on the social media site.
Researchers: Moscow’s social media meddling had little impact on the 2016 election.
Plus: Would Adam Smith be a libertarian if he were alive today?
A new proposed regulation may test the limits of the Executive Branch's authority to impose regulatory requirements on federal contractors.
If the midterms favor Republicans, their top priority needs to be the fight against inflation—whether or not they feel like they created the problem.
The idea that the Fed has the knowledge necessary to control the economy with perfectly calibrated policies was always an illusion.
James Taylor croons while the stock market burns after another ugly report on inflation.
Plus: The editors respond to a question about the Forward Party.
America’s experiment with strongman politics may turn out to be blessedly brief.
The good doctor's "individual assessment of my personal risk" apparently lets him attend brunch but not dinner.
The presidency has always been inclined to unilateral power—and many Americans like it that way.
Emergency OSHA rules are frequently struck down by courts.
"That's not the role of the federal government." What happened?
But forthcoming legislation in the Senate could force Biden's hand.
Plus: FTC commissioner on antitrust action against Facebook, FIRE's Greg Lukianoff on the "marketplace of ideas" metaphor, and more...
Politics ruining your holidays? Now you can pay for the privilege.
Plus: Texas attorney general accused of bribery, Homeland Security wants credit reports on immigration sponsors, and more...
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