Sour 16: Help Us Pick the Worst Idea of the Year
Voting begins Tuesday, March 19, and continues through Friday, March 29!
Voting begins Tuesday, March 19, and continues through Friday, March 29!
To fight the King of the Monsters, private citizens must band together.
Blame lingering pandemic-era restrictions that make it harder for people to find a dog or cat they'd like to adopt.
When everyone owns something, no one does.
A new GAO report details federal prosecutors' attempts to put the horse back in the barn.
Plus: Tanks in Gaza, quitting the DSA, Gen Z hates a sex scene, and more...
The folly of government-run grocery stores is sadly not a historical relic like the USSR.
But that decision seems to violate federal law.
The answer? Because special interests and government prevent the free market from working the way it should.
The only effective means of keeping tax collectors from misusing data is keeping it from them.
Look for these budgetary swindles at a failing K-12 system near you.
A combination of "absurdly high" federal tariffs and excessive FDA regulations created the conditions for a crisis.
No one could have considered this possibility, except perhaps the many food-processing facilities that immediately did exactly that.
Phantom thunderstorms scotch thousands of flights, because the FAA sucks.
A new audit says one out of every $6 distributed by the Small Business Administration during the pandemic was stolen.
Staffing shortages and laughably out-of-date technology in the federal government's air traffic control system are leading to a lot more flight delays.
When the state won't shade you, buy a hat.
Maybe taxpayers would make fewer mistakes if the federal tax code weren't so hopelessly complex.
Three years after "15 days to slow the spread," things almost look like they're back to normal. But they're not.
An escalator in a subway station is considered a "component" but a fire suppression system in the same station is considered a "finished product." Why? Because the bureaucrats say so.
Plus: Democrats doubt Harris' ability to win, an end to pandemic emergency status, and more...
Report author: “The COVID-19 pandemic was a catastrophe for human freedom.”
The lesson here: Public health messaging needs to be clear and specific. Oh, and federal bureaucracy sucks, as usual.
The CDC and FDA, when confronted with scarce vaccine supply, refuse to learn from their COVID-19 mistakes.
The feds botch another epidemic.
Foot-dragging and red tape by the CDC and the FDA have fueled an avoidable outbreak.
The government worsens the baby formula shortage, again.
Creating a TSA-like experience for every single New York City subway rider is one of the worst ideas floated in the wake of yesterday's tragic shooting.
Life is returning to "normal" after two years, but that normal includes even fewer limits on executive powers.
Last year may have been the year of the Cuomosexual, but 2021 rightly disabused people of the notion that New York's governor had their best interests at heart.
The postal service is trying to get its fiscal house in order. It's also alienating large shippers of first-class mail.
"There really is no overarching federal strategy to guide the government’s efforts to improve Americans’ diets," says a new government report, which indicates that overlap in initiatives is creating waste.
Still, Facebook should not have allowed its VIPs to flout the rules it claimed applied to everyone.
One government failure cascades into another.
If they're good enough for Europeans, surely they're good enough for Americans.
Once an up-and-coming city, Portland was destroyed from within by radical activism and political ineptitude.
How New York's governor botched early-pandemic guidance to residential care facilities for intellectually disabled adults
Federal predictions that 20 million Americans would be vaccinated by the end of 2020 were off by an order of magnitude.
Why didn't Cuomo and De Blasio build a decent, user-friendly website?
The New York governor should look to his own state.
Plus: Commemorating the first U.S. sex worker protest, why Parler is a success story for Section 230, and more...
A politicized vaccine distribution process intended to take price out of the picture has given the edge to the rich, connected, and powerful.
Meanwhile a privately owned campground nearby works to bring in business
Do you appreciate the incompetence, in-fighting, obstructionism, authoritarianism, and waste that you pay for?
Competent responses to the crisis have come from people and organizations voluntarily helping each other and themselves.
In a nation of edicts, we serve at the pleasure of the king.
Amity Shlaes concludes in her new book that grand governmental schemes to broadly reorder society are doomed to fail.