Pronatalists Want To Boost Fertility With Blue Laws and Government-Enlisted Fertility Influencers
The Institute for Family Studies wants to increase America's birth rate. Some of its ideas are a little far out.
The Institute for Family Studies wants to increase America's birth rate. Some of its ideas are a little far out.
Ambrogio Lorenzetti's Allegory of Good and Bad Government presents a bustling city where prosperity comes from voluntary cooperation and leaders know their place.
A new law requires grocery stores to keep one staffed checkout open for every three self-checkout stations.
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
"I want a smaller government. I want to get crooked judges and police officers out of the government," the rapper tells Reason's Andrew Heaton.
Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi talk about Graham Platners' downfall and all of the internet rumors surrounding the health of Sen. Mitch McConnell.
The Trump administration is protecting Americans from an invasion of illicit handjobs.
Plus: Should Folarin Balogun have been allowed to play? The simple fix for red card suspensions.
In sports as in foreign policy, he treats cheating as a virtue. And it doesn’t even work.
The father of the World Sports Exchange tells his story.
Plus: World Cup tourists embrace America, the Supreme Court expands gun rights, and Europe's resistance to air conditioning
The latest allegation from Jenny Racicot is very serious and difficult to reject.
The next Folarin Balogun could be in a field that matters much more than a soccer pitch. America should not handicap its access to such talent.
I've seen some carping about the process. But getting to the right result is the ultimate goal.
Republican and Democratic coaches take questions from the press
1776 is a musical about John Adams' pursuit of American independence.
Two distinctly American traits that powered the Revolution: We don't like being told what to do by our supposed betters, and we really don't like being told to shut up.
We should heed Alexis de Tocqueville's warning: "A man's admiration for absolute government is proportionate to the contempt he feels for those around him."
After 250 years, Americans are still considering this basic question.
Most Americans still appreciate the freedom the country was founded upon.
America's Founding through the eyes of the least popular Founding Father
America was founded by drinkers, distillers, and maltmen whose consumption would be labeled problematic by today's public health authorities.
A lawyer's—and former trial judge's—perspective.
First-place wins include work on America's gerontocracy, an interview with anti–death penalty activist Helen Prejean, and some Star Wars comedy.
A new collection features the caustic critic at his best.
This year's World Cup has largely avoided the stadium subsidies, forcible displacement of people, human rights violations, and other evils historically associated with the event.
Plus: failing power grids, Canadian euthanasia, AOC running for president, and more...
Plus: A 29-year-old DSAer wins, San Francisco's disappearing babies, and more...
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss the Supreme Court’s rulings on birthright citizenship and transgender athletes.
Plus: How sportsbooks moved online and changed sports betting forever.
Washington’s troops won the ground war, but today's left and right are waging war on the ideals of the Revolution.
How sports betting moved online and started a debate about its benefits and negatives.
It's a temporary reprieve for a sector that has been struggling for years. But the fight is just getting started.
The Great American State Fair promised a celebration of freedom. So why was I stuck in the air?
A drunk, depressed young woman fights personal demons and an interstellar sex trafficking gang. Isn’t this supposed to be fun?
Intellectual curiosity used to define the political right. Now, imbecility rules the day.
My American Revolution revisits the American Revolution through those that keep the revolutionary spirit alive.
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss a misleading Atlantic article about World Cup visitors.
"We created a problem and it's our responsibility to fix it," former Seattle City Council President Sara Nelson admitted.
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss Joy Reid's recent remarks about July Fourth.
Understanding the stakes of Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections.
The sci-fi scumlords GWAR have been killing presidents onstage for years, but until now they say they've never had problems with the Secret Service.
Plus: the worst rule at the World Cup, and the worst person in golf?
A new book shows how a phrase made its way from the crime pages to our political arguments—and picked up a passel of meanings along the way.
Zohran Mamdani's administration has not studied how New York City's government-backed grocery stores will affect nearby mom-and-pop outlets, which operate on thin profit margins.
The league’s conduct is indisputably protected by the First Amendment. But that doesn't make it wise.
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