Tim Walz Was a COVID-19 Tyrant
The Minnesota governor actually defended the state's disastrous nursing home policies.
The Minnesota governor actually defended the state's disastrous nursing home policies.
Walz's track record as governor includes pushing for higher taxes, legalizing marijuana, and asking neighbors to spy on one another during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It's good to hear a candidate actually talk about our spending problem. But his campaign promises would exacerbate it.
According to a new report, the average eighth-grader needs over nine months of extra school time to catch up with pre-COVID achievement levels.
Author Matt Ridley debates virologist Stephen Goldstein on the origins of SARS-CoV-2.
Even the mask mandators are done with once-ubiquitous pandemic precautions.
Opening night of the Republican National Convention programmed a central issue with a Trumpian twist: "Make America Wealthy Again."
Even if EcoHealth's "basic research" in Wuhan didn't cause the pandemic, it certainly failed in its mission to stop it.
Most officer retirements happened in 2021, and there is no evidence showing cities with more intense protests saw a greater number of officer exits.
The U.S. has successfully navigated past debt challenges, notably in the 1990s. Policymakers can fix this if they find the will to do so.
Those three presidential candidates are making promises that would have bewildered and horrified the Founding Fathers.
The candidate who grasps the gravity of this situation and proposes concrete steps to address it will demonstrate the leadership our nation now desperately needs. The stakes couldn't be higher.
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
Plus: A listener asks if there are any libertarian solutions to rising obesity rates.
Just the latest development in the continuing saga of COVID stimulus fraud.
Pastor Joshua Robertson stepped up when his community asked for support. His efforts have more people realizing that there is an alternative to the failing school system.
The Biden administration says its new guidance will make pandemic research safer. Critics say it suffers the same flaws as past, failed gain-of-function regulations.
Sen. Rand Paul explains why FOIA litigation shouldn’t have been necessary to find this out.
Washington keeps getting caught pushing the kind of disinformation it claims to oppose.
The president has tried to shift blame for inflation, interest rate hikes, and an overall decimation of consumers' purchasing power.
Government school advocates say competition "takes money away" from government schools. That is a lie.
Bhattacharya explains the stakes of Murthy v. Missouri, the politicization of medical research, and his RFK Jr. endorsement.
At yesterday's congressional hearing, the former NIAID director played word games and shifted blame in an effort to dismiss credible claims that his agency funded work that caused the pandemic.
Plus: Cryogenic freezing, masking for robberies, Trump surrenders his guns, and more...
Why aren't politicians on both sides more worried than they seem to be?
So many problems would have disappeared if we had treated them like a normal product.
A government scientist is the latest official whose attempts to evade the Freedom of Information Act have landed him in hot water.
Inflation and expiring funds push public education into financial chaos.
The former New York Times reporter explores the collective madness that washed over us in 2020, tracing the path from #MeToo to “Intifada Revolution!”
Price controls lead to the misallocation of resources, shortages, diminished product quality, and black markets.
Federal officials say EcoHealth Alliance failed to properly report on its gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and to monitor safety conditions there.
The latest movie in the Apes franchise gestures at interesting ideas about politics and civilizational conflict, but it doesn't develop them.
Total spending under Trump nearly doubled. New programs filled Washington with more bureaucrats.
In data from over 200 cities, homicides are down a little over 19 percent when compared to a similar time frame in 2023.
If businesses don't serve customers well, they go out of business. Government, on the other hand, is a monopoly.
In lieu of the planned debate with Brent Orrell, Gene Epstein and Tom Woods discuss the prudence of COVID-related restrictions.
Let's just call this what it is: another gimmick for Congress to escape its own budget limits and avoid having a conversation about tradeoffs.
In the Jim Crow South, businesses fought racism—because the rules denied them customers.
Money supposedly spent to help Americans may actually have done a lot of damage.
Despite their informal nature, those norms have historically constrained U.S. fiscal policy. But they're eroding.
State governments have until the end of 2026 to spend the cash, even though Congress ended the COVID-19 emergency declaration last year.
Martin Kulldorff talks about his dismissal from Harvard Medical School, persisting college vaccine mandates, and surviving COVID-era censorship on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Columnist Joe Nocera debates Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein.
Since COVID-era school closures, chronic absenteeism has increased from 15 to 26 percent, with poor districts struggling the most.
The move comes in response to Reason's reporting about the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board's push to crack down on licensees for minor violations racked up during the pandemic.
The pandemic showed that America's founders were right to create a system of checks and balances that made it hard for leaders to easily have their way.
Congress has authorized over $12 trillion in emergency spending over the past three decades.