The European Commission Is Assaulting American Tech Companies
Meta, Apple, Microsoft, and others have all faced legal action from the European Union in recent years.
Meta, Apple, Microsoft, and others have all faced legal action from the European Union in recent years.
City University of New York professor Peter Beinart and AEI's Michael Rubin debate Israel and Palestine.
Across the country, parents of gender-dysphoric kids are confronting state intrusion.
To justify the immediate deportation of suspected Venezuelan gang members, the president is invoking a rarely used statute that does not seem to apply in this context.
Is shutting down the CDC's HIV prevention division a good idea?
Already this year, the agency has allegedly conducted a warrantless raid in Newark and several warrantless arrests in the Midwest.
Invoking the Defense Production Act won't boost the supply of critical minerals.
While he can't get rid of the department outright, a new executive order attempts the next best thing.
The long-delayed remake is a flat, limp, relentlessly boring film, strung along by bland, uninspiring songs.
The Trump administration keeps arresting legal immigrants with views they don't like.
Afghan legal professionals face deadly threats, but a federal injunction and a last-minute boarding letter helped one family escape. Thousands more remain in limbo.
Courts stop DOGE from accessing Social Security Administration data and prevent Homeland Security from deporting Georgetown fellow Badar Khan Suri.
California once was the state where a visionary might start up a gee-whiz concept in a garage. Now bureaucrats and powerful unions would crush that concept in its infancy.
The Federal Acquisition Regulation requires the right for the government to terminate any federal contract "for convenience."
The Senate minority leader mocked anti-tax, anti-government views held by most Americans.
Set in South Korea, Apartment Women reflects real concerns about the country's lagging birth rate.
The Agency depicts the cruelty and dehumanization involved in espionage work.
Linda Martin's lawsuit alleges that the agency violated her right to due process when it took her $40,200 and sent her a notice failing to articulate the reason.
Vox's Kelsey Piper joins the show to discuss the drastic differences between the Biden and Trump administrations on AI—and what it all means for the future of humanity.
Superintendents warned open enrollment would overwhelm them. Instead, they have nearly 3,000 vacancies as parents and students have more choices.
The researchers found that drug seizures in San Francisco were associated with a substantial increase in fatal opioid overdoses.
We can't be sure, and that's why due process matters.
More education dollars are funding more bureaucrats, who, by and large, are not improving student outcomes.
Border officials reportedly barred the academic from visiting Texas after finding anti-Trump messages on his phone.
Last month, the U.K. reportedly demanded access to any Apple user's data anywhere in the world. Paul wants to know if any other companies have received similar orders recently.
The Trump administration has started a pattern of trying to deport legal residents over allegations of pro-terrorist views.
"Bad ideas have been making a comeback," the host of Conversations with Tyler tells Reason.
The D.C. Superior Court is fining Empower CEO Joshua Sear $5,000 for every day he keeps his ride reservation software operational in the city.
The attempt to retaliate against a cinema for screening a documentary on the Israel-Palestine conflict drew national condemnation from civil rights groups and filmmakers.
"Impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision," Roberts noted after Trump said federal judges who impede his agenda should be fired.
The removals challenge Humphrey’s Executor, a Supreme Court precedent that protects independent agency officials from political firings.
Studies have continuously shown that migrants create more jobs than they destroy.
The president is quickly wiping out his own accomplishments.
The ruling by U.S. District Judge Jill Parrish emphasizes that religious freedom must protect "unpopular or unfamiliar religious groups" as well as "popular or familiar ones."
Journals allegedly written by the government's star witness in 2015 were not authentic, prosecutors now say.
Reason Senior Editor Brian Doherty explores the evolution of libertarian thought in his new book.
Plus: Who's in charge of DOGE, protests over Israel's renewed assault on Gaza, and a tribute to the life of Manuel Klausner.
A New York case revives concerns about seizing private property to benefit favored developers.
The rationale for deporting Mahmoud Khalil is chillingly vague and broad.
The GOP faces a choice about how to move forward.
Bob Poole recalls his Reason Foundation co-founder, a brilliant bon vivant.
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