How Hippies Saved the Fourth Amendment
The Nixon administration did everything it could to curb antiwar activism. Then the courts said it had gone too far.
"I knew they were scumbags," a former Bureau of Prisons officer tells Reason.
The Nixon administration did everything it could to curb antiwar activism. Then the courts said it had gone too far.
Sohrab Ahmari inadvertently gives even more reasons to reduce the power of the state.
Nigeria's shantytowns are more functional than its centrally planned gated communities.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law
The Fox libertarian on why joking around is a vital form of free expression
Politicians are throwing laws at the wall and seeing what sticks.
The state's floating barrier on the Rio Grande will cost about $1 million.
One Montreal restaurant was cited for having "fish and chips" on its menu.
Your ideal bug-out bag depends on your needs. Here's what J.D. Tuccille puts in his.
International students want to stay in the U.S. after graduation. Most of them can't.
The people who could benefit from new housing stock aren't on this map—they're exiled to unincorporated areas.
Who cares if Americans can't answer basic civics questions?
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
Joe Biden is making an $80 billion bet that's doomed to fail.
Thank Swifties, not Joe Biden, for Ticketmaster's consumer-friendly pricing policy.
Preferential college admissions violated the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
"The opportunity to think for ourselves and to express those thoughts freely is among our most cherished liberties," Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in the majority opinion.
The former Texas governor spoke with Reason's Nick Gillespie at the Psychedelic Science 2023 conference in Denver.
Popular podcasts and shows portray crime as salacious and sexy, failing ordinary victims in the process.
Author Jacob Soll's commitment to an untenable historical thesis distorts the facts.
An undercurrent of the book is that common people want whatever progressive intellectuals want them to want.
The Amazon miniseries examines the Institute in Basic Life Principles, focusing on the Duggar family and its multiple sex abuse scandals.
A new podcast asks whether federal agents are catching bad guys or creating them.
Washington Post reporter Ben Terris offers a fair treatment to both conservative and liberal activists in the Trump era.
A new book handles the ill-fated CEO's story with respect.
Leaders depicted in the Apple TV+ series outlaw "relics" of the past, even including PEZ dispensers.
This retelling of the Nixon scandal is more in the style of Leslie Nielsen than Robert Redford.
A Chicago sandwich shop's survival depends on cutting through red tape.
"Airport purchase that could make you suspicious to the DEA"
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world.