The Georgia Case Against Trump
Trump's Georgia indictment has much in common with the most recent federal case against him. But also breaks some new ground.
Trump's Georgia indictment has much in common with the most recent federal case against him. But also breaks some new ground.
The defendants will claim their alleged "racketeering activity" was a sincere effort to rectify election fraud.
It was never a principled fight against special privileges granted to a private company.
Plus: The beauty of microschools, the futility of link taxes, and more...
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
Sohrab Ahmari inadvertently gives even more reasons to reduce the power of the state.
I was one of the critics he responded to, and in this post I offer a rejoinder.
Plus: A listener inquires about the potential positive effects of ranked-choice voting reforms.
Javier Milei’s coalition, Liberty Moves Forward, advances to the first stage of the October general election.
Plus: New Zealand libertarianism, Barbie economics, and more...
The only effective means of keeping tax collectors from misusing data is keeping it from them.
The average working woman in 2023 earns enough money to buy a Barbie doll every 33 minutes. In 1959, it took nearly two hours.
End the government’s plea-bargaining racket with open and adversarial jury trials.
Butterfly knives, and prison atrocities, and a clueless detective.
Haley seeks to make her relative youthfulness a selling point. It hasn't caught on among primary voters, but it's nonetheless worth considering whether the oldest candidates are always the best.
The Labor Department is officially undoing changes made to help combat inflation in the 1980s.
Just published, in our symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Speech; more articles from the symposium coming in the next few days.
The injunction is the latest in a series of setbacks for the Biden administration's loan forgiveness agenda.
Plus: A warning about trigger warnings, Biden blocks uranium mining near Grand Canyon, and more...
The lack of oversight and the general absence of a long-term vision is creating inefficiency, waste, and red ink as far as the eye can see.
Giving presidents impunity for using force and fraud to try to nullify election results is far worse than any potential risk of prosecuting Trump.
Since the Renaissance, we've been increasingly able to define who we are as individuals. But is that a false freedom?
The doomsday consensus around climate change is "manufactured," says scientist Judith Curry.
Though an improvement over his obsession with wokeness and culture wars, DeSantis can't seem to ditch the populist demagoguery.
Plus: What media gets wrong about "book bans," Yellow Corporation to default on $700 million pandemic aid loan, and more...
When he alleged fraud and sought help from government officials, they say, Trump was exercising rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Plus: Why don't journalists support free speech anymore?
The Democrats and Republicans seem ripe for replacement. But how and by what?
Is sending kids into the wilderness really the best way to keep them off Pornhub?
Recent articles by Lawfare and Walter Olson perform a valuable service on this front.
A new documentary film argues that the second-largest website on the planet is flooded with misinformation. Is that right?
Moot beaches, sparking the French Revolution, and cash-bail advocacy.