'This Is Not an Emergency'
How Florida prison officials let a man's prostate cancer progress until he was paralyzed and terminally ill.
How Florida prison officials let a man's prostate cancer progress until he was paralyzed and terminally ill.
The Affordable Care Act's individual mandate penalty meets the bankcuptcy code.
Plus: Does Tom Cruise really do all of his own stunts?
The FDA decision is only a mini step toward freeing the pill.
It's a familiar program. And it will result in higher prices, slower growth, and fewer jobs.
a Sixth Circuit panel concludes (by a 2-1 vote) in staying an injunction against the law pending appeal.
"there would be a very strong case for prompt review by this Court."
Global warming is an issue. But there are other pressing problems that deserve the world's attention.
Plus: Court rules against judge who threw child stars in jail during parents' custody dispute, inside the FTC's attempt to stop Microsoft from acquiring Call of Duty, and more...
We once ranked No. 4 in the world, according to the Heritage Foundation. Now we're 25th.
Plus: New rules limit asylum applications, the bad math behind economic doomerism, and more...
Some of the points made by Rabbi Yitzhak Grossman in the course of assessing the issue under Jewish law have broader significance, as well.
Letting third parties pay our bills pushes prices higher and limits our options.
Projections of huge savings are making the rounds. Nothing could be further from the truth.
South Carolina will now only require a certificate of need for long-term care facilities, opening the health care market to smaller providers.
The state’s Supreme Court strikes down an absurd, unneeded occupational licensing demand.
Even taking all the money from every billionaire wouldn't cover our coming bankruptcy.
The few good studies on teen depression and social media undercut attempts to establish causal connections between the two.
Most cancer diagnoses and deaths are due to cancers for which there are no recommended screening tests.
The U.S. tax system is extremely progressive, even compared to European countries—whose governments rely on taxing the middle class.
More than 3,000 Americans die each year waiting for a bone marrow donor. Be the Match still refuses to compensate donors.
Plus: APA says social media not inherently harmful for kids, senators propose Artificial Intelligence Regulatory Agency, and more...
Why the businessman launched a long shot campaign for the presidency.
The stay is only temporary, and could be quickly lifted. But it's still a negative sign for the plaintiffs in the case.
Two leading experts explain how legalizing organ markets can fix the problem, thereby saving tens of thousands of lives each year, and greatly reducing the suffering of patients on the kidney waiting list.
Why won’t the FDA allow women to buy a safer product without requiring a doctor’s visit that medical experts think is unnecessary?
Opposing sides of the debate around a New York City subway homicide have found unlikely common ground.
The records confirm medical neglect in a federal women's prison that Reason first reported on in 2020.
"If there is freedom, private property, rule of law, then Latin Americans thrive," says the social media star.
Plus: The "Kids Online Safety Act" is back and as bad as ever, expect another interest rate hike today, and more…
Plus: Court sides with journalists sued by LAPD, don't ban private employers from requiring college degrees, and more...
Mifepristone will remain on the market for now with no changes to how it can be prescribed.
My brief rejoinder to his response to my earlier post on this subject.
This piece is his response to my post criticizing of an article he wrote in the City Journal.
Some conservatives are in the awkward position of resisting both policies that reduce the role of race in allocating kidneys for transplant, and those that increase it. The better way to alleviate kidney shortages is to legalize organ markets.
It’s not the FDA’s job to tell doctors what to do.
Prosecutors could end up with a trove of patient-level data regarding highly personal drugs like Viagra, abortion pills, and more.
Plus: The editors respond to a listener question concerning corporate personhood.
The divergent orders from judges in Washington state and Texas may bring the battle over mifepristone to the Supreme Court.
In 10 years, the programs' funds will be insolvent. Over the next 30 years, they will run a $116 trillion shortfall.
Plus: Australia's failed news media bargaining code, two ways government created an Adderall shortage, and more...
The ruling is based on separation of powers and Religious Freedom Restoration Act grounds.
Thanks to onerous regulations, life-saving drugs are more expensive and harder to get.
Two New Jersey women who gave birth last fall suffered harrowing ordeals thanks to their breakfast choices.
Online communities have made their diagnoses their identity.
The law allows abortions when there is a "medical emergency"—but what qualifies as an emergency?
The advent of effective new weight loss drugs offers hope for millions of overweight people.
And now the state thinks it needs to crack down even more.