Will Joe Biden Destroy Trump's Legacy of Deregulation?
Trump did more than any recent president to pare back regulatory red tape, but the incoming Biden administration is eager to add more.
Trump did more than any recent president to pare back regulatory red tape, but the incoming Biden administration is eager to add more.
He fought ISIS and volunteered as a medic for BLM. Now he's been arrested for threats against pro-Trump rioters.
Government grows in response to a crisis.
We don’t need new tools or agencies to track alleged domestic terrorists.
Five reasons why Trump's trade war didn't go the way he thought it would.
Our own house is not in order, and Washington has no business policing the world or forcibly remaking other countries in its own image.
Let people join with the like-minded to reject officials and laws that don’t suit them and to construct systems that do.
Plus: Biden pushes 8-year path to citizenship, Parler is back, Josh Hawley's book finds new publisher, and more...
Current law caps the number of employment-based green cards that can be granted each year at 40,000, which doesn't meet demand.
Whatever lies the press is telling us, they are ones that at least some of us want to hear.
A comparison of Texas and California suggests that legal edicts matter less than The New York Times thinks.
The mom got the kid back, but not the car.
The s-word doesn't actually play too well with most voters.
American Thinker says its claims about Dominion Voting Systems were "completely false."
In Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the biggest story was all the reporters looking for a story.
Like the Hays Code and Waldorf Statement before it, new diversity requirements are Tinseltown's way of asserting cultural dominance through self-policing.
He's laid out a five-point plan to speed up getting COVID-19 vaccinations to more Americans.
The Department of Justice rushes to prevent mercy before a new administration can take over.
Meanwhile, a reboot of Walker, Texas Ranger inexplicably exists.
"Let's do the thing, which saves the most lives," says economist Alex Tabarrok: Instead of holding back second doses, use them all right away.
Eviction bans were enacted as an emergency public health measure. They’re quickly becoming a permanent policy.
Objections to police reform are often more rooted in partisan knee-jerk reactions than in sensible policymaking.
Using obscure laws to prevent people from helping each other is obscene.
A Connecticut law that made it easier to sue abusive cops is not expected to have a noticeable effect on municipal insurance costs.
Trump supporters did this, and everyone knows it.
Amazon denies any impropriety in its decision to suspend the Twitter alternative, dismissing the suit as "meritless."
A politician socially distances from his own executive orders.
Frightening events create openings for attacks on civil liberties.
Plus: Happy birthday to Wikipedia, Airbnb's pandemic rebound, and more...
It can be hard to see what's in front of you, especially when you're struggling not to see it.
As long as there have been American elections, foreign powers have sought to influence them.
On the brighter side, Biden wants 100 million vaccinations in 100 days and will push for immediate school reopenings.
Now officials in Chicago and New York are reconsidering their rules.
The First Amendment doesn't come with an exception for "disinformation."
Unfortunately, qualified immunity remains intact.
No, says Techdirt's Mike Masnick, but it is cause for expanding Section 230 and building a more decentralized internet.
The last seven years have been the warmest seven years on record.
Recent upward trends in cases and deaths seem to reflect virus transmission tied to holiday gatherings.
Numerous women claimed on social media that they were mistreated at YAL events and that their concerns were ignored by leadership.
Plus: China tech giants escape U.S. investment ban, law and order liberals reappear, and more...
During the last few election cycles, a wave of well-funded progressive candidates have run for prosecutor's offices in major cities. This time, quite a few reform-minded D.A.s won.