'Emergency' Spending Is Out of Control
Congress has authorized over $12 trillion in emergency spending over the past three decades.
Congress has authorized over $12 trillion in emergency spending over the past three decades.
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
The Biden administration’s social media meddling went far beyond "information" and "advice."
Schools districts that stayed almost entirely remote significantly hindered progress, according to new data.
Several justices seemed concerned that an injunction would interfere with constitutionally permissible contacts.
The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.
The president wants to raise the rate from 21 percent to 28 percent, despite it being well-established that this is the most economically-destructive method to raise government funds.
The admission came as the agency pushed for funding. It's a reminder that the cops should spend fewer resources seizing cannabis and more on solving serious crimes.
The Royalty Transparency Act passed unanimously out of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee yesterday.
California's poorly served public school students need more than a few more dollars diverted to tutoring programs. They need an escape hatch.
"The people who violated the governor's mandates and orders should face some consequences," a Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board member said in 2022.
The president criticized companies for selling "smaller-than-usual products" whose "price stays the same." But it was his and his predecessor's spending policies that caused the underlying issue.
Injury claims for COVID vaccines are subject to a different process than other vaccines.
The Biden administration's interference with bookselling harks back to a 1963 Supreme Court case involving literature that Rhode Island deemed dangerous.
The Massachusetts senator blames corporate greed for price increases that were caused by inflationary federal spending she supported.
The verdict vindicates the constitutional rights that Louisiana sheriff's deputies flagrantly violated when they hauled Waylon Bailey off to jail.
A new study sparks hope that the historic declines in students' reading and math performance following the pandemic may not be permanent.
Health reporter Emily Kopp and biologist Alex Washburne discuss new documents that detail plans to manipulate bat-borne coronaviruses in Wuhan on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Reagan's former budget director says pro-inflation policies destroyed prosperity—and that the only solution is a new, anti-statist political party.
Plus: TED's "genocide apologists," California's speed limits, NYPD's inability to handle road blockages, and more...
Opponents of pandemic restrictions had their day in court and won a victory for open dissent.
The Things Fell Apart host explains how a 1988 quack medical concept inspired George Floyd's death in 2020 and how Plandemic rewrote Star Wars.
The Things Fell Apart host Jon Ronson explains how a 1988 quack medical concept inspired George Floyd's death in 2020 and how Plandemic is basically a rewrite of Star Wars.
A new report brings remarkable economic illiteracy to its focus on poverty and inequality.
Evidence actually shows that vaccinated people are less likely to be hospitalized or die of the infection.
While frequent absences were a problem before pandemic school closures, the lasting effects of online learning have led to consistently high absenteeism rates.
"There has been a deliberate attempt to inflame the public against experts," warned one Davos panelist.
The doctor's claims that he was open to either explanation is flatly contradicted by his literal words.
Republican lawmakers criticized the former NIH official for playing "semantics" about lab leaks and gain-of-function research during closed-door congressional testimony this week.
Republican senators say the change is "mind-bending and deeply concerning."
The federal government is borrowing money at a mind-spinning rate, and you can't blame it on the COVID-19 pandemic anymore.
Francis Collins’ remarks highlight the folly of attaching "infinite value" to a life saved by government regulation.
Post-COVID educational declines are here to stay.
The year's highlights in blame shifting.
Stanford's Jay Bhattacharya debates St. John University's Kate Klonick on the federal government's role in social media censorship.
Lawmakers can take small steps that are uncontroversial and bipartisan to jumpstart the fiscal stability process.
According to an analysis from the Associated Press, 50,000 children in 22 states were still missing from schools in fall 2022.
I focus on the Washington Supreme Court's flawed decision holding an eviction moratorium is not a taking of private property.
Stanford's Jay Bhattacharya debates St. John University's Kate Klonick on the federal government's role in social media censorship.
"Basis of some COVID-19 vaccine technology"
Plus: an unexpected digression into the world of Little Debbie dessert snack cakes.
Plus: DeSantis vs. Newsom, a controversial Christmas-tree lighting, Brazilians use AI, and more...
Too bad that was only a small part of the 90-minute affair.
The White House cited the extraordinarily low recidivism rates among those released and the savings to taxpayers in its veto threat.
Plus: Disease in China, botched Reagan quotes, modern racial segregation, and more...
It appears that DEA agents have been employed on non-drug-related investigations for far longer than they were originally authorized.