Biden Wants To Avoid a First Amendment Showdown Over WikiLeaks
U.S. prosecutors are looking to wriggle out of an espionage trial for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
U.S. prosecutors are looking to wriggle out of an espionage trial for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
"Mayors should not be allowed to launder animus through warrants," the former city council member's lawyer told the justices.
The growing debt will "slow economic growth, drive up interest payments," and "heighten the risk of a fiscal crisis," the CBO warns.
Plus: Squatters, Julian Assange, teen babysitters, Hong Kong migration, and more...
The top 8 teams presented oral argument in Moody v. NetChoice.
Online sports betting companies are using the same legal playbook that once threatened their operations to eliminate competitors.
Some supposed defenders of the right to bear arms react with alarm.
How Vietnam, Watergate, and stagflation supercharged the libertarian movement.
Support for industrial policy and protectionism are supposed to help the working class. Instead, these ideas elevate the already privileged.
In the name of safety, politicians did many things that diminished our lives—without making us safer.
Plus: DEI at the DOE, NYC subway culture, the pandemic's effect on student behavior, and more...
Even if successful, the strategy demonstrates how little interest politicians have in standing for something, rather than against something else.
Plus: Cuba's collapse, D.C.'s crime rate, Austin's housing market, and more...
Voting begins Tuesday, March 19, and continues through Friday, March 29!
In the presentation I explain why Putin's regime appeals to these people, and how they compare with Western sympathizers with the USSR during the Cold War.
Plus: Space dining, Russian elections, Bernie Sanders' 32-hour workweek, and more...
The newspaper portrays the constitutional challenge to the government's social media meddling as a conspiracy by Donald Trump's supporters.
Public use, ballot selfies, and a bonkers closing statement.
The president of the new University of Austin wants to reverse the decline of higher education in America.
Both companies consented to the deal. Why should they have to get permission from the president to do business?
A change that promised to be a moderating influence on politics has instead made campaigns more vicious than ever.
Nearly 15 million Americans had 31 days or more of at-home preparedness in 2020.
After blaming the state's bathroom law, The New York Times says "it has never been clear" whether gender identity figured in the fight that preceded Nex Benedict's death.
Plus: Kamala Harris' abortion clinic visit, Karl Marx's hypocrisy, CDC data struggles, and more...
At every stage, a breach on one side provoked an even more extreme response on the other.
Notre Dame law Prof. Derek Muller so finds in a new analysis of law professor political donations between 2017 and 2023.
Another blow to the idea that algorithms are driving our political dysfunction.
The Republican pollster argues that the "working class is concentrated in states that are more electorally significant to the outcome of the election."
Plus: TikTok ban, AOC primary challenger, DEI revisionism, and more...
During a congressional hearing, the former special counsel caught flak from Democrats outraged by his legally mitigating but politically damaging portrayal of the president.
Plus: Chinese border-crossers, gender transitions for kids, the politics of raw milk, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors a question about progressive taxation in the United States.
Also: Oppenheimer and Godzilla win at the Oscars, Virginia state lawmakers nuke plans for taxpayer-funded arena, and more...