How a Drafting Error Made It Harder for New Yorkers To Obtain Relief From Marijuana Felony Records
Because legislators omitted a crucial letter, there is no straightforward way to downgrade convictions for offenses that are no longer felonies.
Because legislators omitted a crucial letter, there is no straightforward way to downgrade convictions for offenses that are no longer felonies.
Government agencies have paid to access huge amounts of Americans' data.
January's consumer price data indicates another drop in annual inflation, but the past three months might tell a different story.
Lawmakers are once again trying to reclaim their war powers through AUMF repeal.
Artist Dave Cicirelli challenges his audience to create meaning.
Reason is listed among the "ten riskiest online news outlets" by a government-funded disinfo tracker.
Plus: Government regulation of speech is on trial, biohackers flock to experimental charter city in Honduras, and more…
The CDC’s revised prescribing guidelines retain an anti-opioid bias and do nothing to reverse the harmful policies inspired by the 2016 version.
When you meet folks in their natural environment, it's easier to appreciate their differences.
Plus: a listener question on prohibition and a lightning round on the editors' favorite Super Bowl moments
Stellantis, one of the largest automakers on the planet with billions in cash on hand, got a generous handout from the state of Indiana for choosing to build its battery manufacturing plant there.
Because of a series of misleading memes, a troll has been charged with conspiracy "to injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate one or more persons in the free exercise and enjoyment of a right and privilege secured to them by the Constitution and laws of the United States."
"If I disagreed or offered another opinion, I was told I had cognitive dissonance," Josh Diemert says.
We couldn't find any negative review of physicist Steven Koonin's Unsettled that disputed its claims directly or even described them accurately.
Plus: States move to curtail internet anonymity, Amsterdam cracks down on cannabis, sex, and booze, and more...
By restricting private health care choices, the NHS and other beloved single-payer systems were doomed from the start.
A new exhibit at the National Gallery of Art displays how the U.K. changed in the 1970s and '80s.
Cannabis consumers should have the same commercial leisure spaces that alcohol drinkers do.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
Freedom's Furies tells how three women offered their own unique defenses of individual liberty and how their disagreements anticipated the differences among libertarians and classical liberals today.
Over 88 percent of opioid overdose deaths now involve either heroin or fentanyl. Targeting prescriptions is not an efficient way to address mortality.
A legal fight over the Arctic grayling shows how regs can hurt rather than help.
"I pray wherever I go, inside my head, for the people around me," said one priest. "How can it be a crime for a priest to pray?"
Although the law did not change, regulators suddenly decided to criminalize unregistered possession of braced pistols.
Fairytale Farm Animal Sanctuary's work caring for abandoned and disabled animals is imperiled by a demand from the Winston-Salem city government that the nonprofit stop hosting on-site fundraisers and volunteer events.
A coming crackdown on $1.6 billion in unreported tips will continue the IRS' long and ugly history of targeting low-income Americans.
Top government officials reportedly kept rare bourbons for themselves and other powerful insiders.
A male stripper takes on London's historic preservation rules in Channing Tatum's latest ode to hot, sensitive dudes.
Plus: Missouri's "Don't Say Gay" bill, exempting parents from income tax, and more...
Let's start by doing away with the idea that officers are engaged in a war for our streets rather than involved in a civilian operation that requires community support and trust.
A rogues’ gallery of institutions that anybody with an independent mind should skip.
Perhaps unintentionally, this podcast holds up a mirror to the social justice movements of today.
Praising violence as a response to speech we don't like is a hallmark not of admirable Americanism but of oppressive regimes like Hitler’s.
The paper is unfazed by First Amendment objections to the Biden administration's crusade against "misinformation" on social media.
Denuclearization is not possible at any remotely acceptable price, and that may not change for decades to come.
"My artwork is unapologetic," said the artist. "Sometimes it can be very political. Sometimes it can be very controversial."
By raising the effective tax rate on capital gains, the proposal would reduce U.S. saving, discourage entrepreneurship, and decrease economic output.
And increase total health care costs to boot.
Instead of empowering the government to intervene, we should look more holistically at the experience of young people online.
It's a fundamental contradiction that's affected the Biden administration's economic policy for the past two years.
Plus: Some State of the Union fact checking, a livestream discussion about gun rights and violence, and more...
Fifty years ago, dozens of people gathered in Ossineke, Michigan, for one of the strangest funerals in American history
Legislators will increasingly argue over how to spend a diminishing discretionary budget while overall spending simultaneously explodes.
As Biden mentioned fentanyl deaths in his State of the Union address, Republicans called on him to close the border. But "open borders" aren't to blame for overdoses.