Belgian Sex Workers Gain Access to Paid Leave, Right To Refuse Sex Acts
Belgian sex work groups are cheering the new law. But it could come with some downsides.
Belgian sex work groups are cheering the new law. But it could come with some downsides.
Few problems can be resolved by grandstanding politicians threatening new penalties.
In the Netherlands, kids grow up with more independence than in the United States.
The Olomouc clock's changing design reflects history's victors and their legacies.
A front-line report from the Kursk offensive reveals that in the battle for hearts and minds, Ukraine’s resolve outpaces Russia’s crumbling morale, signaling an inevitable conclusion.
Governments around the world seek to suppress ideas and control communications channels.
Kirstie Allsopp posted online about her teen son's trip around Europe. Then someone reported her to the government.
The Telegram co-founder may become a free-expression martyr for the terrible crime of enabling permissionless speech.
The European Union is an engine of global control-freakery.
As Britain grapples with riots, politicians shift focus to “holding tech accountable” by pushing for censorship and sidestepping the deeper issues fueling the chaos.
The Brussels Effect makes meddlesome European regulations a global problem.
The U.S. flirtation with populism barely holds a candle to the situation across the Atlantic.
European speech regulations reach way too far to muzzle perfectly acceptable content.
A new labor law getting bad press is explicitly drafted to stop sex businesses from punishing workers who set boundaries.
Calls from the left and right to mimic European speech laws bring the U.S. to a crossroads between robust First Amendment protections and rising regulation.
Did Elizabeth Warren help cause hundreds of layoffs in Massachusetts?
It's a good thing opponents of the move can appeal to the liberal values of free speech, free association, and equal treatment under law.
Over 1,500 types of wine are protected by European Union regulations.
Some Democrats want to mimic Europe's policies on phone chargers and more.
And in the process, it will stifle innovation and competition.
Economic nationalists are claiming the deal endangers "national security" to convince Americans that a good deal for investors, employees, and the U.S. economy will somehow make America less secure. That's nonsense.
Some Democrats want to mimic Europe's policies on phone chargers and more.
Plus: RFK Jr.'s Super Bowl ad, New York's war on Airbnbs, Biden's TikToks, and more...
The robot vacuum company is based in Massachusetts, meaning some of the terminated employees are likely Warren's constituents.
Sweden reformed socialistic aspects of its pension system and introduced partial privatization.
Argentina is opening domestic air travel to foreign airlines for the first time. The same trick has worked wonders for Europe.
More than five years after it began, former President Donald Trump's trade war is still spiraling out of control.
Plus: Repealing tobacco bans, UN pointlessness, Substack's "Nazi problem," and more…
When government relief efforts fail, individuals step up.
Liberland President Vít Jedlička is still optimistic that these setbacks are just steps toward autonomy for his new country on the disputed Croatian and Serbian border.
The U.K.’s “conservative” prime minister wants to prohibit people born in 2009 and later from buying cigarettes—forever.
Removing high tariffs from foreign imports of baby formula would ease the supply shock of possible factory closures.
The attacks on Sweden's laissez faire approach were shortsighted, says the Cato Institute senior fellow.
Join Reason on YouTube on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion with Johan Norberg about his recent policy analysis of Sweden's decision to forgo lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Rather than posing a national security threat, the growth of China's E.V. industry is an opportunity for global innovation.
People should be free to choose how cautious to be. Mask mandates, lockdowns, and closing schools won't stop the virus.
The Scandinavian country suffered fewer excess deaths and far less economic and social damage than other rich countries that had more restrictive pandemic policies.
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