'15 Days To Slow the Spread': On the Fourth Anniversary, a Reminder to Never Give Politicians That Power Again
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
Schools districts that stayed almost entirely remote significantly hindered progress, according to new data.
A former chief judge of Delaware's Family Court argues that imposing fines and fees on juvenile offenders undermines their potential to become productive, law-abiding adults.
"Laws like this don't solve the problems they try to address but only make them worse," says a Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression attorney.
A law forcing kids off social media sites is still likely coming to Florida.
Despite the popular narrative, Millennials have dramatically more wealth than Gen Xers had at the same age, and incomes continue to grow with each new generation.
Maybe the problem for teens isn't screens, but what they are replacing.
"No parent can shield a child from all risks," the Iowa Supreme Court ruled.
Third-grader Quantavious Eason was arrested and charged as a "child in need of services" after being caught peeing behind his mother's car.
These aren't outright bans. But they still can chill free speech and academic freedom.
The policy is a true budget buster and is ineffective in the long term.
State Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker cited the Bible to explain why.
According to a new lawsuit, NYC's child protection agency almost never obtained warrants when it searched over 50,000 family homes during abuse and neglect investigations.
A recent Pew survey says parents are "very involved in their young adult children's lives," but one might quibble with the definition of "very involved."
Teresa and Jeff Williams had their son, JJ, at home without medical help. They didn't know it would be nearly impossible to get legal documents for him.
"None of these laws prevent kids from viewing anything. They just prevent kids from posting," argues Shoshana Weissmann.
Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms, the judge writes.
Maybe the problem for teens isn't screens, but what they are replacing.
More like total eclipse of the fun.
A new study sparks hope that the historic declines in students' reading and math performance following the pandemic may not be permanent.
Plus: California reparations bills drop, the Biden administration continues the war on gas stoves, and D.C.'s rising crime rate.
Don't let a moral panic shut everything down.
A new white paper from the Canadian Pediatric Society recommends more unstructured play time for kids.
Laws like Utah's would require anyone using social media to prove their age through methods such as submitting biometric data or a government-issued ID.
The proposal seems to conflict with a Supreme Court ruling against laws that criminalize mere possession of obscene material.
They should be heard, not shouted down.
While frequent absences were a problem before pandemic school closures, the lasting effects of online learning have led to consistently high absenteeism rates.
"The fear of liability is ruining modern childhood," says one mom.
That's bad news for Americans.
And some good news, after all.
Post-COVID educational declines are here to stay.
Big government has been ruinous for millions of people. Charities aren't perfect, but they are much more efficient and effective.
Lawmakers can take small steps that are uncontroversial and bipartisan to jumpstart the fiscal stability process.
His mom is rejecting the prosecutors' absurdly strict probation rules.
According to an analysis from the Associated Press, 50,000 children in 22 states were still missing from schools in fall 2022.
An investigation from ProPublica shows that one Knoxville-area facility is putting kids in solitary but skirting scrutiny by classifying the seclusion as "voluntary."
"Over the last 20 years, because of temperature rises, we have seen about 116,000 more people die from heat. But 283,000 fewer people die from cold."
Some of the worst-performing elementary schools in California retrained teachers to teach reading with phonics. A new paper says the change worked.
Biden has proposed further regulating the federal au pair program, which will disproportionately burden highly skilled working mothers.
The study is one of several documenting the perverse impact of an intervention aimed at reducing substance abuse.
While minors were required to be accompanied by an adult to attend the event, state regulators still went after the "not appropriate" drag performance.
An excursion into Facebook groups for empty nesters shows many of them could use a hobby, a job, or even a straitjacket.
We're often told European countries are better off thanks to big-government policies. So why is the U.S. beating France in many important ways?
Students in four Oklahoma school districts are also required to wear their school ID on a lanyard and sit on their own team's side.
According to a new lawsuit, New Jersey has handed over leftover blood from newborn genetic testing to law enforcement and sold it to third parties.
A new study shows the pervasiveness of helicopter parenting.