Bust the Police Unions
They're a consistent force of organized resistance to calmer, safer, less aggressive policing.
This court-invented doctrine shields bad cops from civil liability.
They're a consistent force of organized resistance to calmer, safer, less aggressive policing.
"When you're conditioned to believe that every person...poses a threat to your existence, you simply cannot be expected to build out meaningful relationships."
People who call 911 shouldn't get an ill-trained police officer, especially when they're dealing with a mental health emergency.
Drug prohibition turns police officers into enemies to be feared rather than allies to be welcomed.
With the right freedom of information and use policies, wearable cameras could still be a powerful weapon to increase transparency.
Excessive traffic and pedestrian stops, especially in black communities, are dangerous and counterproductive.
It's time to do something about police seizures of property from innocent people.
The escalation is part of a strategy to unmask China's abuses before the world.
The Washington Post's Radley Balko was a pioneer in reporting on the disastrous consequences of police militarization and the need for criminal justice reform. Now everyone else is catching up.
Reason asked writers who have been on the criminal justice beat for years to lay out serious proposals for reforms with a fighting chance of being implemented.
Baseball teams are finding unusual ways to make up for lost revenue.
House Bill 1193 loosened or abolished rules governing more than 30 different professions.
As of March 2020, combined fatal and nonfatal drug overdoses were nearly 20 percent higher than through the same month in 2019.
President Luis Lacalle Pou's defense of free market capitalism—extremely rare in Latin America—is no coronavirus fluke.
The net result of turning away foreign labor is greater unemployment—and lower wages—for native-born workers.
Like it or not, this is the Roberts Court now.
While script may wire the brain, connect to history, and come more naturally to many kids, digital print is winning.
In the 20th century, far more people were murdered by genocidal governments than by armed criminals.
By virtue of representing the correct vision of the good, these conservatives say, they have every right to use the coercive power of the state to interfere with others' choices.
Researchers and economists have been debating this idea for decades, and a new study in the journal Emotion sheds more light on the role money plays in increasing happiness levels.
Most foreign countries refuse to pay for plasma because of outmoded guidance from the World Health Organization, so much of the world relies on the U.S.'s paid plasma donors.
Occultists, social justice warriors, and techno-utopians may not look like the Christians of yore, but they're more religious than they realize.
How did California's housing shortage happen and why is it so intractable?
How former slaves built an autonomous, self-sufficient, and nearly stateless society in the mountains of Haiti, and how they lost it
How do we resolve the cannabis conflict between state legalization and federal prohibition?
A tale of ballpark upgrades and wasteful government spending
Meet the wild dreamers and wealthy financiers striving for human immortality.
The Nebula Award winner is set in a near-future where public gatherings have been radically limited by a global pandemic and threats of violence.
Mears' effort to take readers behind the velvet rope and explore the world of clubbing proves both fun and sobering.
News of politicians, police, and bureaucrats behaving badly from around the world