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"It's been very stressful for him," says the student's mother. "He just wants to go to school. He wants to do well. He wants to get an education."
The taxpayer-funded office will investigate cases where religious freedom is trampled on while the state implements biblical study into the curriculum.
If government-drawn lines within your country don't possess some sort of moral magic that voids your rights, why would government-drawn lines between countries?
Giving kids freedom doesn't just help children, says Lenore Skenazy, founder of the nonprofit Let Grow. It helps parents, too.
"It is very smart to be the people who are like, 'We are normal moms and dads who love football, freedom, and faith, and we want to keep your freedoms intact,' " the New York Times contributor tells Reason.
Even the poorest citizens of free countries fare better than the middle classes in economically repressive nations.
China's crackdown on costumes is a reminder that the holiday is about freedom.
Venezuela is governed not only by a brutal dictatorship, but by a band of depraved criminals who have enriched themselves in part by stealing money intended to buy food for hungry children.
The co-founder of Ideas Beyond Borders argues that there is "no better independence than economic independence."
Harris is running away from her far-left past.
In the Netherlands, kids grow up with more independence than in the United States.
Newsom's "emergency" rules banning all THC in hemp products doesn't square with his insistence that his state provides more freedom than Florida under Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Drivers in the state narrowly avoided an even harsher restriction on their automotive freedom.
The former president's attempts to put a positive spin on the term are consistent with his alarmingly authoritarian instincts.
Plus: Does the government own too much land in Utah? And the latest response to Friends star Matthew Perry’s drug overdose death.
The Telegram co-founder may become a free-expression martyr for the terrible crime of enabling permissionless speech.
Needing permission to travel hands a dangerous tool to authoritarians.
And probably because Republicans have foolishly abandoned it as a unifying theme.
The New York Times contributor discusses the Democratic National Convention and the rhetoric of "freedom" on Just Asking Questions.
Democrats campaigning both on their pandemic record and minding your own damn business: Pick one.
Plus: RFK Jr.'s exit, anti-Israel protesters at the DNC, and more...
Now more than ever, people’s freedom lies in their ability to communicate and access information with privacy and security.
After a Michigan couple indicated their intent to open a green cemetery, their local township passed an ordinance to forbid it. A judge found the rule unconstitutional.
Those three presidential candidates are making promises that would have bewildered and horrified the Founding Fathers.
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
Of the 21 Texas House Republicans who joined Democrats to kill school choice during the special sessions, only seven survived their primaries.
Chevron deference, a doctrine created by the Court in 1984, gives federal agencies wide latitude in interpreting the meaning of various laws. But the justices may overturn that.
The holiday represents a page-turning from one of the most shameful chapters in American history.
Plus: A listener asks the editors about the Selective Service.
Australia’s Prohibition-style attempts to abolish nicotine use have predictably led to a new drug war being fought over a legal substance.
The Selective Service should be abolished, not made more efficient and equitable.
The plaintiffs argue that the Department of Energy has no legal authority to impose its own water use limits on energy-consuming home appliances.
The transit authority was sued after rejecting an ad that directed viewers to go to a website "to find out about the faith of our founders."
The ACLU, another polarizing organization, was willing to defend the NRA in court. That should tell you that some things aren't partisan.
Louisiana lawmakers approved a bill to end the testing requirement for florists. Going forward, only a fee will be required.
Digital payments are easy to use, but also to monitor and block.
They're fleeing tyranny and seeking opportunity, not coming to "build a little army."
The Institute for Justice has launched a project to reform land use regulation.
Once again, DeSantis is a guy who claims to love freedom—until he disagrees with the choices some adults make.
In the Jim Crow South, businesses fought racism—because the rules denied them customers.
Argentine President Javier Milei and Tesla CEO Elon Musk met for the first time in Austin, Texas, where they "agreed on the need for free markets."
Instead, the White House is pushing for similar job-killing regulations on the national level.
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