Labor Unions Hate Robots—and It's Stopping Democrats From Delivering on Affordability
Labor unions almost always value union jobs over technologies that save time, money, and lives.
Labor unions almost always value union jobs over technologies that save time, money, and lives.
Leonard Hoffmann and his neighbors in North Dakota went to court to fight for fair market value—as the Constitution promises—after WBI Energy Transmission said it would take their land at a discount.
Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi discuss Donald Trumps' nothing-burger primetime address.
“The First Amendment does not allow government officials to shut down speech simply on account of it being ‘offensive,’” says a legal expert at FIRE.
The FDA says it can't license Regenative Lab's overseas sales today because it might change its regulations tomorrow. Now, the company is suing.
As someone should have explained to him by now, that's not how it works.
According to a new report, nearly 90 percent of the Department of Transportation's owned or leased buildings are more than half-empty.
Journalist Michael Tracey and professor Marcella Szablewicz debate the Epstein scandal and the public reaction to the files.
It's not woke. It's a rousing analog epic about cracks in the liberal order.
California local governments of every size are crying poor as they struggle with budget shortfalls.
The E.U. pulls ahead of the U.S. in the creepy international automobile surveillance race.
The Declaration author's historic home is hosting a "1776: Road to the Declaration" exhibition.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill that promises property owners will receive the surplus proceeds when the government seizes their home to satisfy a tax debt.
The only federal agency that has never passed an audit could soon get another $60 billion, even as it buries reports on the spiraling costs of its programs.
During his confirmation hearing, the attorney general nominee repeatedly misrepresented the nature and scope of the sweeping immunity deal he approved.
It's almost like there is no real underlying principle guiding the Trump administration's tariff policies.
The United Nations’ latest World Drug Report makes that very clear.
Once the trust fund is empty, Social Security can pay out only what it collects. Yet few candidates are talking about this in any serious way.
Presidents have repeatedly used the SPR to manipulate markets and shield consumers from the consequences of bad policies.
Tech companies may soon have to comply with yet another U.K. regulation.
His amendment to cut all military aid to Israel split the Democratic Party almost evenly.
The U.S. government has used private ad data to get around the Fourth Amendment. Now foreign enemies are turning it into a weapon.
Plus: fixing Rikers Island, the Democrats' Maine scramble, India's affirmative action, and more...
Is baseball’s new audience more interested in prop bets or pennant races?
Plus: An unconstitutional war is back on.
A combination of travel restrictions and anti-American sentiment has led to a decrease in international tourism during Trump's second term.
Camp East Montana is the largest immigration detention center in the nation. It's also plagued by brutality and neglect, according to a string of internal and external investigations.
Giving people a pathway to sue federal immigration officials for violating constitutional rights is one way Congress can help hold the rogue agency accountable.
Contradicting a federal judge, the acting attorney general, who blessed that cozy arrangement, insists it was not a product of collusion or self-dealing.
Despite decades of panic, a new reactor has been approved for the first time in 10 years.
A proposed bill would legalize commercial autonomous vehicles in D.C. under one of the country’s most expensive regulatory frameworks, but unions still want the brakes applied.
If successful, it could do more harm than good to the entertainment industry.
It's coming faster than you might think.
Spencer Greenberg discusses the science of self-improvement, why our thoughts and emotions can mislead us, and what it really takes to change.
Against the new war on SSRIs.
The Manhattan Institute’s Charles Fain Lehman misstates the findings of a new paper to claim he was right all along.
Plus: More strikes on Iran, Nayib Bukele runs for a third consecutive term, private dinosaur-bone ownership, and more...
The late senator was one of the last advocates of hawkish policies out of step with public opinion.
Trump’s nominee for attorney general has repeatedly subverted justice to benefit his boss.
Gov. Kathy Hochul’s one-year moratorium buys time for the state to create a convoluted regulatory regime.
A Tomahawk missile struck an Iranian school and reportedly killed over 100 children in February.
The agency pretends to loosen scientifically unjustified regulations but does nothing of the sort.
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