Civilians Across the Middle East React to the Iran War: 'A Fear That Settles in Your Heart'
"Now they are hitting everything. Nowhere is safe. But don't worry, we are okay," one Iranian woman texted her American relative.
"Now they are hitting everything. Nowhere is safe. But don't worry, we are okay," one Iranian woman texted her American relative.
The restrictions are often framed as a crime prevention measure. But the fine print points to a different motivation: adding union jobs.
President Donald Trump and his predecessors spent decades putting the U.S. on a path toward war against Iran.
Legally, Trump must either cease operations or ask Congress for approval. He did neither, and Congress just went on recess.
Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi discuss how Sen. Rand Paul is ready to go after Anthony Fauci's pardon and how Mr. Beast blew up the internet, again.
Cole Tomas Allen's actions just don't make sense, even in his own words, or in a time of political polarization.
In a bid to “reaffirm its exclusive jurisdiction” over prediction markets such as Kalshi, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is suing six states for interfering in federally regulated financial markets.
A new bill would compel Meta, Google, and TikTok to pay for Australian journalism.
Bootleggers, Baptists, and the fight over who gets to write America's self-driving car rules.
Unionization efforts at Starbucks and Amazon get front-page media coverage. But dozens of workplaces discard their unions every year, often with little fanfare.
This 20-years-later sequel traces a generation's economic fortunes through the decline of magazine journalism.
Department of Homeland Security
Plus: FISA reauthorization, driverless trucks in California, and an Epstein suicide note.
After California made this same mistake in 1999, it took 12 years to dig out of the hole. Taxpayers footed the bill.
The term “hate speech” gets thrown around a lot, but it’s legally protected in the U.S.
A gossip column runs up against monarchical censorship.
Contrary to the concerns of big-is-bad types, the game's charm has only grown since its Big Tech acquisition.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney is marketing his new Canada Strong Fund as a "sovereign wealth fund," but it is one of many ways the government can waste taxpayer money.
China ordered Meta to roll back its acquisition of AI startup Manus on Monday.
A MrBeast post is going viral on X, and the correct answer is obvious.
Every dollar of well-intentioned government assistance comes with a behavioral price tag that we've largely refused to count.
Mere proposals can change the risk calculus for business and investors. Politicians, and the public, should be wary.
Europe’s resistance to immigration is a path to budgetary disaster.
The ethics of using safe gene therapies to improve the health and cognition of Down syndrome children and adults.
Plus: FISA reauthorization passes the House, a very capitalist museum, escalation in the redistricting wars, and more...
Plus: The Supreme Court says “demands for a charity’s private member or donor information” raises First Amendment problems.
(Don't) hold your genetically enhanced horses.
Such claims are hard for most defendants to prove. But most defendants haven't drawn the public ire of the president.
A response to the popular science communicator Hank Green
The president had promised that private donations would cover the East Wing renovation.
However, the tariffs did shift supply chains away from China and towards other countries with low-cost manufacturing, like Vietnam, Malaysia, and India.
If Trump can end temporary protected status for Haitian and Syrian nationals, don't expect it to stop there.
Making less harmful products harder to get pushes people toward more dangerous ones.
“The sale of E15 year-round would help the ethanol industry and no one else,” says one agricultural policy expert.
Financial censorship should worry us all, suggests Rainey Reitman in Transaction Denied.
Cars are already spying on drivers. A 2021 law requires manufacturers to install more tracking technology.
The proliferation of drones to Malian rebels is a bizarre, unexpected form of blowback.
Andy Serkis discusses the corrupting nature of power, what Animal Farm says about modern authoritarianism, and whether technology expands or diminishes human creativity.
Plus: A dicey FISA reauthorization, kingly quips about burning down the White House, the world's narrowest tax breaks, and more...
America’s political factions hate each other and torment each other when in power. Violence results.
"Geofence" searches illustrate the perilous combination of modern technology and deference to law enforcement.
The brief, which asks a federal judge to reconsider an injunction blocking the project, reads like it was transcribed from the president's Truth Social account.
When he returned to the White House, Trump vowed to protect free speech from the government. The FCC's latest move against ABC and Disney looks like the opposite.
The owners of the house that Marilyn Monroe died in claim in a lawsuit that the city took their property when it landmarked it.
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