Sick of the Pilgrims? Celebrate Roger Williams Instead
While we often spend Thanksgiving remembering a different set of Puritan settlers, the religious, freedom-loving Roger Williams is an apt hero for the more liberty-minded.
While we often spend Thanksgiving remembering a different set of Puritan settlers, the religious, freedom-loving Roger Williams is an apt hero for the more liberty-minded.
These are the people who showed up when the economy was shut down by the government, working in jobs labeled "essential."
State governments already want relief from the "Buy American" mandates included in the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
Thousands of tech workers are being laid off. That’s putting H-1B visa holders on tight timelines to find new work.
Private property was the solution to their failed experiment. But people keep repeating the Pilgrims' mistakes.
The ACLU of Oregon is calling on other state governors to follow suit.
While the pause comes as a relief to those opposed to the death penalty, Ivey's full-throated defense of the practice makes it clear that she seeks only a temporary pause in executions, not an end to the policy.
Plus: Jack Daniels sues Bad Spaniel, Oregon issues marijuana pardons, and more...
Plus: The editors consider what type of fresh attacks the marijuana legalization movement is likely to encounter.
The link between Bostock v. Clayton County and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina
The court says a 51-year "life" sentence for a 2015 murder violated the Eighth Amendment.
A rare, successful nondelegation challenge in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
The Supreme Court's resolution of this procedural issue may be a preview of the justices' views on the ultimate resolution of the student loan forgiveness litigation.
The bill would amp up surveillance while doing little to actually protect anyone.
To be eligible for a pardon, patients will have to obtain cannabis from other states and document their diagnoses and purchases.
He wants election reforms in Georgia, different priorities for the national Libertarian Party, and plans to challenge Justin Amash—but maybe not how you'd expect.
She was the beneficiary of a political system that limits opportunities for new ideas and new faces to rise.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine's appointment to the Supreme Court will dertermine the orientation of the Ohio Supreme Court.
According to the former president's lawyers, his decision to retain the documents made them "personal."
The first female speaker of the House leaves behind a legacy of big government liberalism.
The biggest beneficiaries of economic growth are poor people. But the deepest case for economic growth is a moral one.
Plus: What Orion is carrying to the moon, when you might be able to munch on some lab-grown meat, and more...
Legalization is unlikely in the foreseeable future, but banking reform and expungement could be feasible.
The judge granted the Biden administration a stay, which will keep the policy in place through late December.
The Supreme Court grapples with the original meaning of the 14th Amendment in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina.
"Engineers are really good at making things better, but they can't make them better than the laws of physics permit."
On Monday, a federal appeals court placed an injunction on Biden's student loan forgiveness plan, marking the second major setback for the proposal in recent days.
If passed, same-sex couples wouldn’t need to worry about Supreme Court precedents.
A court rejects a claim of religious exemption from the ban on gun possession by felons and unlawful drug users.
Voters rejected other Republicans who have cozied up to the former president, including Senate candidate Blake Masters and secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem.
The deal includes several amendments to the original draft legislation that are unlikely to have much substantive effect.
The decision overrules a trial court ruling and likely paves the way for a decision on the merits striking down the program.
After Eric Parsa's death at the hands of Louisiana police, officers received approval for search warrants of the teenager's "incidents of violence or documented behavioral reports" at school.
Plus: The editors field a question on U.S. ballot counting and talk more on Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover.
A federal appeals court has entered a nationwide injunction pending appeal in Missouri's lawsuit against President Biden's student loan forgiveness policy.
A cult following fails to attract voters dismayed by Democratic policies.
The Biden Administration has reportedly asked for Commissioner Magnus's resignation, but he has refused to go.
A new proposed regulation may test the limits of the Executive Branch's authority to impose regulatory requirements on federal contractors.
Monique Owens shouted over critical speakers at a September city council meeting, claiming it was her "First Amendment right."
The Arizona Senate candidate who said "libertarianism doesn't work" is expected to come up short.
Plus: Users surge on decentralized social media platform Mastodon, the fall of city drugstores, and more...
People with money on the line try harder than pundits to be right, and they adjust quickly when they've made a mistake.
With government meddling, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less.
After the latest reprieve from the governor, he’s scheduled for execution in February.
As the race that may decide control of the Senate heads to a runoff, the third-party candidate is fielding criticism from both sides that he spoiled the race.
On Tuesday, voters in Alabama, Tennessee, Vermont, and Oregon approved ballot measures that removed exceptions to anti-slavery laws in their state's constitutions, effectively banning forced prison labor.