Biden Reportedly Is Planning To Unilaterally Mandate Background Checks for All Gun Sales
A watchdog group cites ATF "whistleblowers" who describe a proposed policy that would be plainly inconsistent with federal law.
A watchdog group cites ATF "whistleblowers" who describe a proposed policy that would be plainly inconsistent with federal law.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about requiring gun buyers to pass a psychological assessment.
Plus: Why don't journalists support free speech anymore?
Regulations costing less than $200 million will no longer be considered "economically significant."
The Supreme Court considers the scope of presidential power in Biden v. Nebraska and Department of Education v. Brown.
The justices refuse to vacate the injunction against President Biden's student loan forgiveness policy, but accept certiorari.
A federal appeals court has entered a nationwide injunction pending appeal in Missouri's lawsuit against President Biden's student loan forgiveness policy.
Plus: Users surge on decentralized social media platform Mastodon, the fall of city drugstores, and more...
Plus: Spider study sheds light on how misinformation spreads, Airbnb regulation ruled unconstitutional, and more...
The abortion wars have entered a new phase.
You’d think drag brunches are why we’re paying $6 a gallon for gas.
Someone might want to remind them that Democrats have a majority in both congressional chambers.
Plus: CDC withholds data, court upholds nutritionist licensing, Ottawa police break up Freedom Convoy, and more...
The Prohibition-era three-tier system is causing consolidation, not the market.
Plus: The vaccine and abortion debates, a promising jobs report, and more...
Don't let naysayers fool you. Richard Branson's space flight is a boon for society.
Executive order leaves it to individual businesses, not the government.
Plus: GOP gender policing in North Carolina, marijuana legalization mistakes, and more...
If the refusal of lawmakers to enact a president's policies is justification for unilateral executive action, then a slide toward elective monarchy is inevitable.
Out with the CDC and teachers unions, in with school choice for everyone.
Plus: Columbia University neuroscientist defends heroin use, Cuomo plan would still criminalize growing or delivering marijuana, and more...
Plus: House OKs bloated $1.4 trillion spending package, new Amash bills aim to protect asylum seekers and immigrant detainees, and more...
Plus: Biden definitely wins Georgia, Alaskans approve ranked-choice voting, Facebook faces next antitrust lawsuit, and more...
Plus: DOJ sues over Melania Trump adviser's book, Justice Clarence Thomas wants to limit Section 230, and more....
There’s nothing good about censoring communication platforms citizens want to use.
Plus: More red states may get legal weed, antitrust action against Google expected this week, the Cuties controversy, and more...
Plus: Raleigh cop uses fake evidence in drug cases, caution on CDC study linking restaurants to COVID-19 cases, and more...
"I know what moral panics look like; they look kind of like this."
Redundancy with an iron fist
The next Democratic president will be all too happy to govern by pen and phone too, say the Reason Roundtable podcasters.
Plus: Hong Kong police arrest pro-democracy publisher Jimmy Lai, Portland demonstrators set fire to police union headquarters, protests erupt against "Europe's last dictator," and more...
An ambiguous presidential order affecting a Chinese company connected to several popular video games sows confusion.
Plus: the latest unemployment numbers, Biden apologizes for comment on diversity, Ohio governor gets flip-flopping COVID-19 results, and more…
Plus: unrest in Minneapolis, Twitter labels Trump tweet, and more...
Plus: Justin Amash seeking L.P. nomination, pandemic hasn't halted FDA war on vaping, and more
Plus: New York legalizes Zoom weddings, federal labeling laws exacerbate grocery store shortages, and more...
Takeout and delivery orders are the only thing keeping the state's 115 craft breweries afloat during the coronavirus outbreak.
This inability to agree on the nature of the national interest is endemic not just to the new nationalism, but to all of politics.
Just like their counterparts in the Democratic Party do!
Federal agencies evade the rulemaking process, yet still levy fines, revoke permits, and seize property via “guidance.” Trump’s orders may put a stop to this practice.
At the second Democratic debate, the presidential hopeful showed her affinity for executive action.
Donald Trump's rhetoric is breathtakingly authoritarian, but so far he's done less than his predecessors to expand executive power.
A crude tool unlikely to do much good and that might do some harm.
The president signed an executive order supporting free speech on college campuses.
"It is the policy of the federal government to encourage institutions to foster environments that promote open, intellectually engaging, and diverse debate."