Kentucky Seizes People's Booze, Auctions It Off To Fund Anti-Booze Group
Selling vintage spirits is better than pouring them down the drain, but the state shouldn't use the proceeds to fund a private corporation.
Selling vintage spirits is better than pouring them down the drain, but the state shouldn't use the proceeds to fund a private corporation.
Cultivated meat is getting better and better. That's why states keep trying to ban it.
With the help of New York’s environmental review law, local NIMBYs halted an approved housing project, adding to delays and costs in a city facing a housing shortage.
But the amendment won't prevent the state from killing you.
Abortion battles are becoming tech policy battles.
The federal government furnishes a relatively tiny amount of K-12 funding—but the feds need relatively little money to exert power.
Climate change is a serious environmental concern, but it is not clear how the EPA helps.
When money comes down from the DOT, it has copious strings attached to it—strings that make infrastructure more expensive and less useful.
Golden State voters decisively rejected progressive approaches to crime and housing.
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.
Residents of the two deep-red states have approved medical use of cannabis but remain leery of going further.
The initiative also would have authorized state-licensed "psychedelic therapy centers."
Whether the policy will actually be implemented depends on the outcome of a legal challenge.
Initiative 2117 would have struck down the state’s cap-and-trade greenhouse gas emissions program, which has been criticized for its high cost and unclear results.
A majority of the state's voters said yes to Amendment Three, but that wasn't enough to clear the 60 percent threshold required to pass a Florida ballot initiative.
Peanut the Squirrel charmed a large internet audience that helped fund an animal sanctuary. Then the government seized him.
Washington's Covenant Homeownership Program excludes certain applicants on the basis of race.
Can't Americans all just get along? Maybe we can't—and perhaps we shouldn't have to.
The Institute for Justice partners with an independent eye doctor to challenge state regulations that protect hospital monopolies and restrict patient access.
"Invoking the innocence of children is not...a magic incantation sufficient for legislatures to run roughshod over the First Amendment rights of adults."
Media hysteria and overzealous governments have led many to believe that childhood independence is a form of abuse.
Kate Barr is running for state senate in North Carolina, hoping to raise awareness about the effects of gerrymandering.
The state's powerful coastal land-use regulator is arguing its awesome development-stopping powers applies to rocket launches as well as housing.
The state has been demanding that TV stations remove political ads in support of a reproductive freedom amendment on the ballot this year.
Despite homelessness being on the rise, local governments keep cracking down on efforts to shelter those without permanent housing.
Can't Americans all just get along? Maybe we can't—and perhaps we shouldn't have to.
Americans are turning to home-cooked meals, but state regulators are making it harder for small food businesses to survive.
Ryan Walters' strict stipulations make it clear he’s steering Oklahoma schools to purchase Donald Trump’s Bibles at a hefty cost.
Progressives are trying to fix the errors of the past, but they're ignoring the best solution: More robust property rights.
He returned S.B. 961 to the California Senate for all the wrong reasons.
Absolute immunity protects prosecutors even when they commit serious misconduct on the job.
Some people really think nonalcoholic beer is a gateway to alcoholism.
Two brothers are asking the Supreme Court to stop their town from using eminent domain to steal their land for an empty field.
Reason talked with pro-life Americans who are uncomfortable with the post–Roe v. Wade abortion policy landscape.
Politicians are always trying to control what they can't understand.
Season 2, Episode 3 Health Care
Part Two: How Certificate of Need laws limit access to health care, and why those rules can be so difficult to dislodge.
“The separation of church and state appears nowhere in the Declaration of Independence or Constitution," a top Oklahoma education official said in defense of the state's Ten Commandments decree.
This company made a product to serve victims who don't want to go to police right after a sexual assault. Some politicians want to ban it.
This Kentucky Republican won't stop until he finds a state willing to make legal room for ibogaine, a drug he calls "God's medicine."
The idea, proposed by former President Donald Trump, could curb waste and step in where our delinquent legislators are asleep on the job.
Season 2, Episode 2 Health Care
Too often, it's government bureaucrats acting under the influence of special interests and against the wishes of doctors and patients, with sometimes tragic results.
From overspending to the state's overly powerful unions, California keeps sticking to the taxpayer.
Housing costs, job availability, energy prices, and technological advancement all hinge on a web of red tape that is leaving Americans poorer and less free.
(You don't really have to shut up, but here's my money.)
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