Nurses criticized Trump’s loan cap policy, but the change may actually keep tuition in check instead of harming students.
Welcome to the most wonderful time of the year: Reason's annual webathon, our end-of-year fundraising drive. All year long, ...
The administration navigates mounting concerns about the Caribbean strikes as lawmakers investigate who is truly responsible.
Even if you accept the president's assertion of an 'armed conflict' with drug smugglers, blowing apart boat strike survivors ...
The city of Chicago must borrow $283.3 million to resolve a growing backlog of police misconduct lawsuits, according to ...
KOSA is back, along with more than a dozen other bills that will erode free speech and privacy in the name of protecting kids ...
Misused pandemic funds, luxury travel, and declining achievement reveal a crisis of priorities—one only school choice can fix ...
Friedrich Hayek's most popular work was dedicated to "the socialists of all parties." That phrase perfectly captures politics ...
Reason Roundup' newsletter writer and associate editor Liz Wolfe goes live with Reason's writers and producers to give you an ...
From a brief filed yesterday by Joshua J. Bennett (Baker & Hostetler LLP) on behalf of Dale Carpenter, the Cato Institute, and me in Spectrum WT v. Wendler (for the panel majority and dissent, see ...
Opinion
The Third Circuit's Curious Opinion on the "De Facto" U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey
The Circuit's decision appears to invite the workaround of dividing responsibilities between two persons in the U.S. Attorney's Office, who could then each exercise half of that Office's powers.
A century ago, two oddly domestic puzzles helped set the rules for what modern science treats as "real": a Guinness brewer ...
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