Journalist Sues Cops Who Handcuffed Him for Photographing 'Cop City' Arrests
After police detained Benjamin Hendren, they urged construction workers to lie about him.
After police detained Benjamin Hendren, they urged construction workers to lie about him.
Which party can do the least to fix America's troubled old-age welfare system?
How do the two major party candidates stack up on housing policy?
Officers should have known that handcuffing a compliant 10-year-old is unnecessary, the court ruled.
Hacktivist-journalist Barrett Brown sets out to settle scores in his new memoir.
Plus: GOP platform changes, Russia destroys children's hospital, Mayor Eric Adams invents garbage cans, and more...
Public colleges must have viewpoint-neutral policies, but they don't have to allow protester encampments.
The town of Lakeland will have to refund Julie Pereira $688 in fines and fees and pay her $1 in nominal damages for violating her First Amendment rights.
Plus: A listener asks whether Bruce Springsteen's song Born in the U.S.A is actually patriotic.
Biden wants to retain his power. Most political leaders do!
With his initial reforms now in effect, the Argentine president announced the "second phase" of his war against inflation and the deficit.
Most officer retirements happened in 2021, and there is no evidence showing cities with more intense protests saw a greater number of officer exits.
Ellis Island arrivals maintained close ties to the Old World for generations. Nativists want us to forget that.
The original version was overly punitive.
Plus: Journalists shilling for Biden, Zyn imitators pissing off regulators, in defense of Little Tech, and more...
Subsidies for journalism will divorce reporters from the need to even try to win readers and viewers.
"Documented Dreamers" continue to have to leave the country even though this is the only home many have ever known.
Dennis Pratt and Gene Epstein debate the efficacy of ethical and consequentialist arguments for libertarianism.
The president's plan to address security at the Mexican border drew backlash both from immigration advocates and border hawks.
Georgia parents were accused of child abuse after they took their daughter to the doctor. Does the state's story add up?
"I had a bad night," Biden repeatedly said in an ABC interview about his debate debacle.
The Manhattan Institute's Charles Fain Lehman misleadingly equates a survey's measure of "cannabis use disorder" with "compulsive" consumption that causes "health and social problems."
"Every teacher, every classroom in the state will have a Bible in the classroom and will be teaching from the Bible in the classroom," state Superintendent Ryan Walters announced last week.
We've now had two consecutive presidential administrations deploy versions of this same argument in response to questions about the fitness of the man allegedly running the federal government.
Keir Starmer’s Labour secures a sweeping victory, taking the helm from Rishi Sunak.
Economists Gene Epstein and David Friedman debate the merits of the Austrian and Chicago schools of economics.
The Biden administration says its new Title IX interpretation is a legitimate reading of the statute, but opponents characterize it as arbitrary and capricious.
Proposed bills reveal the extreme measures E.A.’s AI doomsayers support.
People are sick of being forced to vote for the "lesser evil." A new voting method may fix the problem.
Department of Education settlements with protest-wracked colleges threaten censorship by bureaucracy.
Staying true to the game, producers of the Amazon show even leave room for side quests and open-ended exploration.
Ruth Whippman discusses her new book BoyMom: Reimagining Boyhood in the Age of Impossible Masculinity.
A modern legal battle challenges the federal ban on distilling alcohol at home—a favorite hobby of the Founding Fathers.
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.
Supervised release shouldn't require former inmates to give up their First Amendment rights.
So much for those "cheap fake" videos.
A federal appeals court ruled that the government is not immune from a breach-of-contract lawsuit filed by foreign students duped into enrolling into a fake school run by ICE.
Congress forced the government to sell gasoline from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, an obligation the Biden administration is now bragging about fulfilling.
The 5th Circuit ruled that the agency violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it rejected applications from manufacturers of flavored nicotine e-liquids.
The creator of Masameer County was charged with promoting homosexuality and terrorism for his South Park-style satirical cartoon.
And the Supreme Court agrees to weigh in.
The podcasting pioneer discusses capturing the real J.K. Rowling, quitting The New York Times, and his new show Reflector.
Plus: Illegal beach booze-selling, California's "tax apocalypse," and more...