The Best of Reason: After a Century, the Federal Tea Board Is Finally Dead
Imported tea was required for decades to pass a literal taste test before it could be sold in the United States.
Imported tea was required for decades to pass a literal taste test before it could be sold in the United States.
New immigration pathways are letting private citizens welcome refugees and other migrants—and getting the government out of the way.
There is nothing in the Constitution that prevents an inmate from winning the presidency.
Maybe the problem for teens isn't screens, but what they are replacing.
Misled by a bad law, graduate students are drowning in debt.
Biden's economic policies gave us three years of excessive, wasteful, and poorly targeted federal spending.
As the party grows more populist, ethnically diverse, and working class, will Republicans abandon their libertarian economic principles?
Hasan Minhaj’s stand-up tests the boundaries of fact and fiction.
CEOs are beginning to wonder what to do when environmental, social, and governance factors are at odds with performance.
Rosy fiscal expectations based on eternally low interest rates have proven dangerously wrong.
Anyone advocating neoliberal policies is now persona non grata in Washington, D.C.
The colorful, mostly libertarian history of Key West.
Ballots should be counted quickly and accurately.
Eradication of the apex predator is "likely impossible."
The growing anti-transparency atmosphere in the state might make the Florida Man extinct.
Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?
A new Friedman biography ably explores the economist's ideas but sidesteps the libertarian movement he was central to.
Some progressives want to remove bureaucratic obstacles to growth—in the service of Democrats and big government.
David Friedman's anarchism doesn't have the answer for everything. That's the point.
Free Agents author Kevin J. Mitchell makes a neuroscientific case against determinism.
Popular podcasts and shows portray crime as salacious and sexy, failing ordinary victims in the process.
The epidemiology of food and drink is a mess.
The worst of the antitrust alarmism keeps proving untrue, as tech companies believed by some to be monopolies instead lose market share.
An undercurrent of the book is that common people want whatever progressive intellectuals want them to want.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law.
For five decades, drugs have been winning the war on drugs.