This Is the School Choice Moment. Will the GOP Screw It Up?
Republicans are in danger of squandering a promising opportunity for education reform on culture war squabbles.
In the aftermath of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, it's time for Europe to step up and America to step back.
Republicans are in danger of squandering a promising opportunity for education reform on culture war squabbles.
"Hold on, now, you're starting to sound like an anarchist..."
Despite the objections of animal protection organizations, careful commercial fishing may be the best bet for the Amazon and the world's aquariums.
Caught stealing from motorists, these towns disbanded their police forces or even disbanded their governments altogether.
The Hereticon organizer on deplatforming, tribalism, and why tech dudes and journalists are natural enemies
Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be.
Though the United Nations has yet to recognize the Free Republic of Liberland, its metaverse equivalent will exist in the cloud.
The first innovative nuclear reactors designed by American companies may well begin operation in Eastern Europe before they get built in Idaho.
Newly confirmed Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson has a good track record on cases involving qualified immunity.
Civil liberties groups argue that debt-based license suspensions are unfair and illogical since they deprive people of transportation, preventing them from earning money to pay off debts.
Unfortunately, an automatic crypto purchase made with after-tax earnings won't lower your taxable income.
How Stewart Rhodes went from denouncing authoritarianism to urging an authoritarian crackdown
Xiulu Ruan, a pain specialist, was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison for prescribing opioid analgesics "outside the usual course of professional medical practice."
Lawmakers stuffed more than $8 billion in pet projects into an omnibus federal spending bill passed in March. But wait, didn't Congress ban earmarks back in 2011?
Nearly 4 million people fled Ukraine in the first month after the February 24 invasion, and thousands have left each day since.
Every June since 1990, residents had held a vigil for the Tiananmen Square dead. But in 2020, Hong Kong announced an extension of social distancing restrictions until June 5, the day after the anniversary.
The author of Their Eyes Were Watching God defies easy political categorization.
Early cities' concentrated populations and burgeoning scale didn't spontaneously summon pharaonic god-kings or bureaucrats.
It wasn't just autocrats who were frequently tempted to address "fake news" about the pandemic through state pressure and coercion.
Preet Bharara's new children's book, Justice Is... purports to be "a guide for young truth seekers."
Despite caricaturing (some) gun owners, Nick Mamatas' conspiracy-fueled science fiction novel avoids moralizing in favor of dark humor.
The veteran satirists tackle major issues in America's increasingly divisive culture war with no condescension, cringe, or partisan preference.
Culture critic Chuck Klosterman's latest covers Nirvana, the first Iraq war, American Beauty, Waco, VCRs, and Ross Perot.
Unlike in Catan, the value of your wheat, wood, iron, coal, manufactured goods, and luxuries will fluctuate depending on what has recently been bought and sold in the game's marketplace.
The movie's whole idea seems to be that if Batman truly wanted to make Gotham a better place, he'd find some other way to do it, perhaps involving politics.
Some critics have described Anna Delvey as a "symptom" of the "disease" of "capitalism"—not simply a selfish crook eager for money and fame.
Instituting a "no-fly" zone would be the U.S. "essentially going to war with Russia."
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world.