'Too Much Law' Gives Prosecutors Enormous Power To Ruin People's Lives
In a new book, Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch describes the "human toll" of proliferating criminal penalties.
In a new book, Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch describes the "human toll" of proliferating criminal penalties.
But 11 states still forbid wine from being sold in grocery stores anyway.
The company needs a lot of government permission slips to build its planned new city in the Bay Area. It's now changing the order in which it asks for them.
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.
It seems anything the government touches dies—today, it’s thousands of acres of once-productive vineyards.
A recent boom in entrepreneurship challenges red-tape hurdles.
The presumptive Democratic nominee has a more liberal drug policy record than both the president and the Republican presidential nominee.
Recent actions by the FTC show that its officers should review the Constitution.
How legislators learned to stop worrying about the constitutionality of federal drug and gun laws by abusing the Commerce Clause.
The agency claims DOI and DOC have "a high potential for abuse" because they resemble other drugs it has placed in Schedule I.
Voters should not dismiss the former president's utter disregard for the truth as a personal quirk or standard political practice.
Bureaucratic overreach is stirring up unnecessary trouble for Utah bartenders.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
A federal judge rejected the government’s excuses for banning home production of liquor.
How legislators learned to stop worrying about the constitutionality of federal drug and gun laws by abusing the Commerce Clause
"I don’t care to replace a left-wing nanny state with a right-wing nanny state," the onetime presidential hopeful said this week.
Proposed bills reveal the extreme measures E.A.’s AI doomsayers support.
A modern legal battle challenges the federal ban on distilling alcohol at home—a favorite hobby of the Founding Fathers.
The 5th Circuit ruled that the agency violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it rejected applications from manufacturers of flavored nicotine e-liquids.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson says these cases will "devastate" the regulatory state. Good.
“Immigration is an area of the law where the partisan alignments break down over Chevron.”
The Court is remanding these two cases for more analysis—but it made its views on some key issues clear.
China's free speech record is bad, but the federal government's isn't so great either.
It won't end the administrative state or even significantly reduce the amount of federal regulation. But it's still a valuable step towards protecting the rule of law and curbing executive power.
The Court says Chevron deference allows bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function, creating "an eternal fog of uncertainty" about what the law allows or requires.
Supporters say the measure will uphold “social justice,” but research shows licensing requirements don’t always work as intended.
The state cut down private fruit trees and offered gift cards as compensation. It didn't solve the citrus canker problem.
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.
A widely cited study commits so many egregious statistical errors that it's a poster child for junk science.
The agency's inscrutable approach to harm-reducing nicotine products sacrifices consumer choice and public health on the altar of youth protection.
The state has thousands of unauthorized shops but fewer than 200 licensed marijuana sellers.
The bill would banish insurance companies from the state if they invest in companies profiting from oil and gas.
As the DEA relentlessly tightens regulations on pain meds, the FDA refuses to approve a safer alternative already being used in similar countries.
Chevron deference, a doctrine created by the Court in 1984, gives federal agencies wide latitude in interpreting the meaning of various laws. But the justices may overturn that.
We need parents with better phone habits, not more government regulation of social media.
Plus: Ex-NSA chief joins forces with OpenAI, conscription squads hunt Ukrainian draft-dodgers, and more...
The plaintiffs argue that the Department of Energy has no legal authority to impose its own water use limits on energy-consuming home appliances.
The president has tried to shift blame for inflation, interest rate hikes, and an overall decimation of consumers' purchasing power.
Plus: Sen. John Fetterman introduces a new zoning reform bill, U.C. Berkeley finally beats the NIMBYs in court, and Austin's unwise "equity overlay."
Joseph Stiglitz thinks redistribution and regulation are the road to freedom—he’s wrong.
New research and paternalistic legislators could threaten our last in-flight comfort.
California's stringent AI regulations have the power to stifle innovation nationwide, impacting all of us.
The panel's recommendation, based on several concerns about two clinical trials, is a serious setback for a promising PTSD treatment.
European speech regulations reach way too far to muzzle perfectly acceptable content.
Moving is no longer a viable way to grow your wealth in the U.S., says the author of Build, Baby, Build.
The Libertarian Party’s presidential candidate says he would address areas from a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants to high-skilled visa reform.