The Government Can't Save India's Suffering Farmers
Protests in the country come from an understandable place. But their demands are divorced from certain unfortunate economic realities.
Protests in the country come from an understandable place. But their demands are divorced from certain unfortunate economic realities.
The Georgia man was released after making a plea deal. He spent a decade in jail before ever being convicted of a crime.
U.S. prosecutors are looking to wriggle out of an espionage trial for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
"Mayors should not be allowed to launder animus through warrants," the former city council member's lawyer told the justices.
The growing debt will "slow economic growth, drive up interest payments," and "heighten the risk of a fiscal crisis," the CBO warns.
The officers are avoiding accountability after getting qualified immunity.
Most aspiring journalists need an apprenticeship, not a degree.
Peter Moskos, criminal justice professor and former Baltimore police officer, discusses ways to reform policing and turn failing cities around on the latest Just Asking Questions podcast.
The market offers many alternatives to bad desserts. We don’t need the FDA to step in.
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Online sports betting companies are using the same legal playbook that once threatened their operations to eliminate competitors.
Congress has authorized over $12 trillion in emergency spending over the past three decades.
Economic nationalists are claiming the deal endangers "national security" to convince Americans that a good deal for investors, employees, and the U.S. economy will somehow make America less secure. That's nonsense.
While drafted with good intentions, the rule prioritizes electric vehicles that run on batteries, even as hybrids see strong sales growth.
Some supposed defenders of the right to bear arms react with alarm.
And the real kicker is that Intel was probably going to create those jobs without taxpayers funding anything.
Hours before the president said "no one should be jailed" for marijuana use, his Justice Department was saying no one who uses marijuana should be allowed to own guns.
How Vietnam, Watergate, and stagflation supercharged the libertarian movement.
Support for industrial policy and protectionism are supposed to help the working class. Instead, these ideas elevate the already privileged.
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
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State officials “jawboned” financial firms into cutting ties with the gun-rights group.
The Biden administration’s social media meddling went far beyond "information" and "advice."
If partisans have one thing in common, it's confirmation bias.
Imported tea was required for decades to pass a literal taste test before it could be sold in the United States.
The justices established guidelines for determining whether that is true in any particular case.
Schools districts that stayed almost entirely remote significantly hindered progress, according to new data.
The new Nigerien military government has ordered U.S. forces out of their expensive air base.
Diosdado Cabello, Nicolás Maduro's right-hand man, is threatening retribution against the satirical website.
The defamation lawsuit is the latest in Trump's campaign of lawfare against media outlets, but all of those suits have failed so far.
Even if successful, the strategy demonstrates how little interest politicians have in standing for something, rather than against something else.
Plus: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is fooled by TikTok housing falsehoods, Austin building boom cuts prices, and Sacramento does the socialist version of "homeless homesteading."
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Voting begins Tuesday, March 19, and continues through Friday, March 29!
Several justices seemed concerned that an injunction would interfere with constitutionally permissible contacts.
Plus: A listener asks about Republicans and Democrats monopolizing political power in the United States.
The story behind the city's ban on unlicensed drone businesses is even weirder than the ban itself.
The company leaves Texas over an “ineffective, haphazard, and dangerous” age-verification law.
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The former civil liberties group continues morphing into a progressive organization.
The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.