Facebook Says Noting the CDC's Scientific Misrepresentations 'Could Mislead People'
The social media site slapped a warning on a column in which I criticized the CDC for exaggerating the evidence supporting mask mandates.
The social media site slapped a warning on a column in which I criticized the CDC for exaggerating the evidence supporting mask mandates.
The analysis found that wearing masks in public "probably makes little or no difference."
The Cochrane Library's review of masking trials should sound the death knell for mask mandates everywhere.
So holds a district court, allowing a damages claim under D.C. law for the Nationals' refusing to exempt from the mandate a man who alleged "that he had a medical condition and, because of it, could not wear a mask."
"Keep safe from COVID by following CDC advice to wear a mask."
"I never thought this could happen in this country," Gregory Hahn said.
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."
Why should low-income children be the only ones still forced to wear masks?
We’re likely to be poorer, distrustful, and less free for years to come.
Gov. Jay Inslee says Washington state's COVID-19 emergency will finally come to an end on October 31.
The left-leaning commentator wants to get back to normal. So more than 600 experts want to censor her.
In the Bay Area and in Los Angeles County, authorities are quickly learning there's little public will to follow their mandates.
New guidance from the Centers for Disease Control finally acknowledges that the pandemic is over for most people.
The larger, louder half of Penn & Teller on Donald Trump, COVID, masks, vaccines, mandates, and what comes next for freedom.
The larger, louder half of Penn & Teller talks masks, vaccines, compassion, Bob Dylan, and much, much more.
The White House's coronavirus adviser answered questions about mask mandates, gain of function research, and more.
San Diego schools chief demonstrates once again that Democratic-controlled urban districts will be the first to add COVID restrictions—and subtract students.
Plus: The editors select their most influential post-war libertarian thinkers.
Evidence from the past two years suggests they won't make a difference.
Plus: trans teens, trouble at the FTC, and more...
The en banc Sixth Circuit concludes that the lawsuit seeking an injunction against Michigan's mask mandate is now moot.
The libertarianish Colorado Democrat is devolving decision-making to parents and trying to lower the income tax to zero.
The president’s COVID-19 adviser embodies the arrogance of technocrats who are sure they know what’s best for us.
The Biden administration's main priority seems to be leaving the agency's authority vague enough to allow future interventions.
Some implications of the government's decision not to seek a stay of the district court ruling. Plus, the low quality of the trial judge's opinion doesn't necessarily mean there are no good arguments against the mandate's legality.
That's a fundamentally anti-democratic attitude.
Clarifying the agency's authority could impede future power grabs.
Plus: Conspiracy theories are undergoing a vibe shift, Florida won't stop attacking private companies, and more...
The decision against the rule hinged on whether the agency had the power it asserted.
Though travel isn't completely back to normal, this change is an overdue acknowledgment that we can't always view COVID-19 transmission as catastrophic.
The decision holds that the CDC exceeded its legal authority. But it may be vulnerable to reversal on appeal.
"Our system does not permit agencies to act unlawfully even in pursuit of desirable ends," writes Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle.
Revived mandates remind everyone that governments have done far more harm than good in the pandemic.
Plus: Elon Musk offers to buy all of Twitter, China's "zero COVID" policy is reaching its limits, and more...
Kamala Harris is only human, says Jen Psaki.
"I know the CDC is working to develop a scientific framework," says Ashish K. Jha
"People's irrational fears are taking over these policy decisions," says one parent.
"In practical terms, COVID-19 poses zero threat to the G.W. community."
The lawsuit raises some of the same issues as earlier successful challenges against the CDC's eviction moratorium. But, in this case, the federal government has a stronger legal rationale for its policies.
Life is returning to "normal" after two years, but that normal includes even fewer limits on executive powers.
Q&A with Dr. Vinay Prasad, a practicing hematologist-oncologist and associate professor in the department of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco
The same agency that brought us security theater continues to enforce a rule that never made sense.
The policy, which covers trains, buses, and subways as well, is now set to expire on April 18.