House Oversight Committee Is Fighting Twitter Censorship the Wrong Way
Congress should set its sights on bad government actors who pressured social media companies.
Congress should set its sights on bad government actors who pressured social media companies.
Biden's speech offered plenty of opportunity to present a counter-narrative to continued taxes and spending. Instead Sanders went a different direction.
The bipartisan (if shouty!) embrace of big-government nationalism ensures our populist moment won't end any time soon.
As usual, Biden's gun policy proposals bump up against reality.
His State of the Union address sketched a foreign policy that is reckless on some points, relatively restrained on others, and utterly uninterested in any real resolution to America’s lingering military entanglements.
In his State of the Union address Tuesday, President Joe Biden said that he wants to hold police "accountable." But he neglected to mention the elephant in the room.
Plus: Bill would make all social media platforms check IDs, appeals court rejects rent control challenge, and more...
These days, he may run for president. His politics have changed.
There are many reasons people move, but overburdening your citizens is a good way to lose them.
The president's State of the Union address re-upped a tired, old promise to spend more tax dollars on less infrastructure.
His administration has contributed to the problems Biden says he wants to solve.
Biden vowed to block any attempts to cut Social Security benefits, and Republicans made it clear that they have little appetite to try it.
A proposal to limit state AG (and other) forum-shopping for national injunctions.
According to the suit, the officer "acted with malice or in reckless disregard of Jane Doe's federally protected rights."
The age verification proposal is a disaster for both children and adults.
What we can learn from the State of the Union addresses by Jimmy Carter in 1979, Richard Nixon in 1971, and JFK in 1963
Plus: Court denies motion to suppress January 6 geofence warrant, Texas may ban some immigrants from buying property, and more...
Why isn’t affirmative action in college admissions prohibited under the Civil Rights Act?
Gov. Greg Abbott has already announced that he’d sign the bill if passed.
Now a judge has cleared him of wrongdoing and struck down the rule used to justify the arrest.
The Florida governor wants to fund more migrant stunts, despite claiming that his budget will “keep more money in the pockets of Floridians.”
We may have finally discovered a limit to judicial immunity.
By destroying judicial review, they would empower the narrow right-wing majority to violate the rights of minorities.
A new proposal to more than triple visa entry fees for performers will harm American audiences and culture.
Plus: Judge strikes down Super Bowl censorship law, report details how much inflation was driven by stimulus spending, and more...
"When you have technology designed by humans, the bias is going to show up in the algorithms," said one former child welfare worker.
If you look closely, you'll find a lot of contradictions.
"My intention is to ensure that all Americans from the wealthiest millionaire to the poorest homeless person can exercise these rights without fear of consequence from our government," said Jeff Gray.
While same-sex marriage was already protected under federal law, that protection was afforded by the Supreme Court, not Congress.
The senator bemoans the "cannabis crisis" he helped maintain by blocking the SAFE Banking Act.
"Everybody should have an expectation that they can put a sign in their yard and speak on a certain topic," a lawyer for the couple said.
Plus: Democrats doubt Harris' ability to win, an end to pandemic emergency status, and more...
Plus: The editors consider the ongoing debt ceiling drama and answer a listener question about ending the war on drugs.
"Comprehensive and accurate records are critical if patterns and causes of harm are going to be identified and corrected," said an attorney representing Louisiana inmates.
Report author: “The COVID-19 pandemic was a catastrophe for human freedom.”
The state's "arbitrary requirement to house all male death row prisoners in permanent solitary confinement does not promote safety and security, is inconsistent with correctional best practices, and serves no penological purpose," the lawsuit claims.
Sen. Rand Paul says Republicans "have to give up the sacred cow" of military spending in order to make a deal that will address the debt ceiling and balance the budget.
The White House's idea of using Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to adopt rent control faces numerous legal and practical hurdles.
Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh addressed questions on a range of questions at a recent Notre Dame symposium.
They both share in their authoritarian desires to censor online speech and violate citizen privacy.
The site crashed because Swift is very popular, not because antitrust enforcement is too weak.
In 1950, there were more than 16 workers for every beneficiary. In 2035, that ratio will be only 2.3 workers per retiree.
The president seems to have forgotten his concession that such laws leave murderers with plenty of options that are "just as deadly."
"The Town has routinely detained, cited, and forced Mr. Brunet to go to trial to vindicate his constitutional rights, taking the extraordinary step of adopting a boldly unconstitutional local Ordinance to silence him," the complaint reads.
Reviewing and improving the federal government’s data security and digital defenses should be a priority.
Despite multiple warnings in the past, the Department of Labor has yet to implement a comprehensive strategy for detecting unemployment insurance fraud.