Why Suing LLCs in Federal Court Under Diversity Jurisdiction Can Be So Complicated
Seems hard to justify, especially since corporations are treated quite differently; but there it is.
Seems hard to justify, especially since corporations are treated quite differently; but there it is.
Americans should plan for their futures rather than relying on a nonexistent Social Security “trust fund.”
His priorities may not be the drastic reforms that are actually needed.
Even with burgeoning private sector support, nuclear can’t thrive without regulatory reform.
Several Republican senators have said they are not inclined to abdicate their "advice and consent" role in presidential appointments.
Plus: The sex-withholders, new JAQ with Lee Fang, and more...
Berry explains why the plan is flawed on legal and other grounds.
Many seriously ill people die waiting for the FDA to approve drugs that regulators in other advanced countries have already approved.
The agency has not made air travel safer but it has made it costlier and more time-consuming to fly.
The states already overregulate alcohol. There's no need for a federal layer of red tape.
The federal government furnishes a relatively tiny amount of K-12 funding—but the feds need relatively little money to exert power.
The Affordable Care Act has become a broken welfare program for people who don't need it.
Like all government perks, SBA lending creates unseen victims.
FOIA has no teeth and bureaucrats abuse its exemptions. Just redact and release every federal workers' emails instead.
Why should the federal government run a transportation corporation?
Climate change is a serious environmental concern, but it is not clear how the EPA helps.
Stop robbing poor, hard-working Peter to pay well-off, retired Paul.
Revising how America's most beautiful public lands are protected would create more ways for Americans to interact with some of the best parts of the country.
When money comes down from the DOT, it has copious strings attached to it—strings that make infrastructure more expensive and less useful.
"Standing armies are dangerous to liberty," Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist No. 29.
Americans spent an estimated $133 billion and 6.5 billion hours filing their tax returns in 2024.
FEMA has given Americans every reason to believe it is highly politicized, a poor steward of federal resources, bad at establishing priorities, and often unable to communicate clearly to people in distress.
Even before the pandemic spending increase, the budget deficit was approaching $1 trillion. The GOP has the chance to embrace fiscal sanity this time if they can find the political will.
Apparently consumers are too stupid to know that butter contains milk.
Unsurprisingly, no justice showed any interest in reviving a lawsuit that should have died long ago.
When it comes to cutting waste, fraud, and abuse, what's lacking is not ideas but the political will to act on them.
Government agencies and officials can’t be trusted, so we should give them less to do.
The president-elect’s record and campaign positions belie Elon Musk’s talk of spending cuts.
Rep. Pramila Jayapal perfectly demonstrates the shamelessness of those who support ending the filibuster.
Golden State voters decisively rejected progressive approaches to crime and housing.
Copying information is not the same as copying content.
Why constitutional theory needs more theory.
Donald Trump will have at least one less federal district court vacancy to fill.
A federal court recently said the Internet Archive is not protected by fair use doctrine.
In bodycam footage, the police major—now the deputy chief—asks for "anything we can get" after being told felony charges would be difficult.
Congress needs to reassert its powers and bring the imperial presidency back down to earth.
Much of the detail remains to be worked out, but lawmakers and corporations are already preparing.
If Musk is truly serious about fiscal discipline, he'll advise the president-elect to eschew many of the policies he promised on the campaign trail.
He’ll be around to protect our freedom for a few more years.
The justices, including Trump's nominees, have shown they are willing to defy his will when they think the law requires it.
In the Abolish Everything issue, Reason writers make the case for ending the Fed, the Army, Social Security, and everything else.
The bipartisan embrace of industrial policy represents one of the most dangerous economic illusions of our time.
Michiganders had to choose between a hawkish Democrat with an intelligence background and a hawkish Republican with an intelligence background for Senate.
Voters rejected Amendment 6, keeping court costs low and pushing lawmakers to fund law enforcement pensions responsibly.
With control of the House still undecided, a Democratic majority could serve as the strongest check on Trump's worst impulses.
In his second term, the former and future president will have more freedom to follow his worst instincts.
Residents of the two deep-red states have approved medical use of cannabis but remain leery of going further.