The Best of Reason Magazine: Your Vote Doesn't Count
Why (almost) everyone should stay home on Election Day
Why (almost) everyone should stay home on Election Day
The NIH had been deleting all social media comments containing words like animal, testing, and cruel.
Plus: Violence in the U.K., dead bears in Central Park, parenting influencer absolutely roasted, and more...
A three-judge panel concludes the rule's challenger are likely to succeed on the merits.
Just because women are conservative doesn't mean they're oppressed.
We're entering peak stupidity with "election interference" claims.
Enjoy your conveniences. But don’t let yourself become helpless in their absence.
The lethal consequences of a common, obscure hospital licensing law.
Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.
Wandercraft, the French company that developed the exoskeleton suit, recently got FDA approval to use them for stroke rehab in the U.S.
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
A majority of the judges concludes this fee constitutes a tax, the authority for which is improperly delegated.
The filmmakers who brought The Coddling of the American Mind to the big screen discuss the students whose stories inspired the film and the state of the media, Hollywood, and storytelling.
The Kids Online Safety Act would have cataclysmic effects on free speech and privacy online.
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.
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.
Life is a decentralized, horizontal network, not merely a centralized, hierarchical tree.
Robert Williams was arrested in 2020 after facial recognition software incorrectly identified him as the person responsible for a Detroit-area shoplifting incident.
Collecting and analyzing newborns' blood could allow the state to surveil people for life.
Libs of TikTok is blasting out screenshots of random people's offensive posts to her millions of followers in hopes of claiming their scalps.
Sen. Rand Paul writes that the lawsuit punishes Apple for a feature its customers like.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
Both parties—and the voters—are to blame for the national debt fiasco.
We're looking at four more years of anti-tech and anti-business antics from the FTC no matter who wins this November.
In a "novel" order concerning the app NGL, the agency takes aim at online anonymity and at minors on social media.
The move "will significantly reduce the amount of time students can be on phones without parental supervision," according to Gov. Glenn Youngkin.
Channing Tatum and Scarlett Johansson star in what may be the first romantic comedy about government funding disputes.
Good intentions, bad results.
Even if EcoHealth's "basic research" in Wuhan didn't cause the pandemic, it certainly failed in its mission to stop it.
Plus: A listener asks whether Bruce Springsteen's song Born in the U.S.A is actually patriotic.
Proposed bills reveal the extreme measures E.A.’s AI doomsayers support.
And the Supreme Court agrees to weigh in.
Don't blame criminal justice reform or a lack of social spending for D.C.'s crime spike. Blame government mismanagement.
Even as he praises judicial decisions that made room for "dissenters" and protected "robust political debate," Tim Wu pushes sweeping rationales for censorship.
The surveillance company mSpy just suffered its third data breach in a decade, exposing government officials snooping for both official and unofficial reasons.
The majority opinion makes clear that social media content moderation is an activity protected by the First Amendment. That likely dooms large parts of the state laws restricting content moderation.
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.
The senior Republican FCC commissioner blames progressive politics, while lawmakers and telecom companies blame bureaucratic red tape.
Americans shouldn’t count on the department to use the technology responsibly or in a limited way.
A year after a court told Maryland police that Cellebrite searches were too broad, Baltimore quietly resumed using the software.
The standing requirements laid down by the majority might make it extremely difficult or impossible for victims of indirect goverment censorship to get their cases to court.
The verdict in Murthy v. Missouri is a big, flashing green light that jawboning may resume.