How the Political Spectrum Turned Inside Out
From 9/11 to the COVID-19 pandemic, crisis moments keep reshaping the political landscape.
From 9/11 to the COVID-19 pandemic, crisis moments keep reshaping the political landscape.
Changing migration patterns, outdated policy tools, and growing presidential power made it inevitable.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
Legislators abuse the emergency label to push through spending that would otherwise violate budget constraints.
It's a familiar program. And it will result in higher prices, slower growth, and fewer jobs.
The GOP nominee can forge a humbler path on foreign policy—or turn back to failed neoconservatism.
Department of Homeland Security
Break it up into fewer, smaller agencies that are more accountable to pre-9/11 departments.
Surveilling American citizens without due process, separating undocumented children from their parents, the TSA—the DHS has been a failure.
From George Santos to Joe Biden, résumé padding is unacceptable. But it's all the lies about legislation we can't afford.
Thanks, but we lived through the lies of their administrations that they used to sell us war and intrusive government meddling in health care.
The long, weird history of partisan electoral shenanigans
It would signal that the transportation future involves decentralization and rapid change rather than Washington-style command-and-control.
Plus: A dispatch from the National Conservatism Conference, a progressive FCC nominee gets a surprising backer, and more...
They give an edge to big companies that have no problems accessing capital and whose executives are often well-connected with politicians.
Democrats want to raise the debt ceiling, while Republicans occasionally remember they're against big government spending.
There simply aren't enough rich people to finance all the new spending.
History is repeating itself in ways that we, and our kids, will live to regret.
National security reporter Spencer Ackerman on 9/11, mass surveillance at home, and failed wars abroad.
"You don’t get to lose a war and expect the result to look like you won it," says the author of Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy.
The foreign policy author and podcast host discusses Joe Biden's withdrawal and how to fix U.S. foreign policy.
Why did it take presidents so long to realize this?
I witnessed firsthand how U.S. actions that favored one group inevitably angered another, which is why the war is an endless game of whack-a-mole.
"The best aspect of the Trump foreign policy is that he has revealed the mind of the foreign policy establishment," says historian Thaddeus Russell. "The worst part... he's a mass murderer just like the rest of them."
Also: This is your last chance to ask The Reason Roundtable co-hosts anything!
"When I say, 'Be kind to one another,' I don't mean only the people that think the same way that you do. I mean be kind to everyone. Doesn't matter."
The impeachment process will be nasty, brutish, and long. It also won't cure the problem of expansive government.
For many of the president's biggest supporters, pushing back against "Trump Derangement Syndrome" is their raison d'être.
Donald Trump's rhetoric is breathtakingly authoritarian, but so far he's done less than his predecessors to expand executive power.
The president's policy of separating families at the border is wrong, but he's enabled by a lack of legislative action dating back decades.
Twitter's Jack Dorsey apologized for eating at Chick-fil-A. What does that have to do with Donald Trump? Plenty.
Trump's Syria-related tweet once again betrays a terrifying lack of historical awareness.
Border Patrol guards average just two illegal-immigrant apprehensions per month; they don't need reinforcements.
U.S. presidents like to go looking for dragons to slay.
Fiscal hawks, from their perch in the wilderness, predict we may again see 13-digit deficits as soon as next year
Many of the underlying sentiments that made the statist post-9/11 bipartisan consensus possible are still in Washington, ready to be exploited.
This week's show covers the John Kelly phone flap, former presidents against Trump, and why Republicans are only pretending to be worried about the budget.
Trying to minimize those divisions isn't very democratic.
Tribalism today, tribalism tomorrow, tribalism forever!
Instead of permanent tax reform we get temporary taxcut-and-spend, again.
The new president is setting the enforcement clock all the way back to 2013
The dissonance between the countries the Trump EO primarily affects and countries associated with 9/11 is embedded in U.S. foreign policy.
Incorrect conventional wisdom never dies.
The GOP drops the pretense of being a free-market party.
The NSEERS program screened more than 93,000 immigrants over nine years but failed to catch a single potential terrorist.
Sanad al-Kazimi hoped for justice. Twelve years later he's still waiting.
(You don't really have to shut up, but here's my money.)
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