Revised Section 702 Surveillance Authority Poses More Danger Than Ever
New language could make almost anybody with access to a WiFi router help the government snoop.
New language could make almost anybody with access to a WiFi router help the government snoop.
Having someone take your fast-food order on a virtual call may seem strange, but the benefits speak for themselves.
Since Donald Trump's alleged falsification of business records happened after he was elected president, he clearly was not trying to ensure that outcome.
The university has a history of suppressing speech from both sides of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
Elica Le Bon, an attorney and Iranian-American activist, talks about Iran's recent strike on Israel on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
The little-known but outrageous practice allowed judges to enhance defendants' sentences using conduct a jury acquitted them of.
"I am not in the newsroom," the embattled NPR chieftain said over and over again.
Plus: Europoor discourse, NPR's woke CEO, a forgotten tech panic, and more...
Science can detect increasingly small particles of plastic in our air and water. That doesn't mean it's bad for you.
There are many pervasive myths about the U.S. tax code. Here are a few.
The long-time public radio editor's resignation proves he was right all along.
If higher tariffs were the solution to anything, wouldn't there be evidence of that by now?
The Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act would prevent law enforcement and intelligence agencies from purchasing data that they would otherwise need a warrant to obtain.
"Profound irreparable harm flows from the Act's chilling of adults' access to protected sexual expression," the filing reads.
The author of The Anxious Generation argues that parents, schools, and society must keep kids off of social media.
Kansas had among the most lax civil asset forfeiture laws in the country, but a bill sent to the governor's desk would strengthen protections for property owners.
An interview with Consumer Choice Center Deputy Director Yaël Ossowski.
Many of the Washington hawks calling for war with Iran had sworn up and down that more pressure was not a path to war.
Plus: Time to ax NPR's funding, African migrants get mad at New York City, Gavin Newsom gets smart, and more...
Money supposedly spent to help Americans may actually have done a lot of damage.
Under a legal theory endorsed by the 5th Circuit, Martin Luther King Jr. could have been liable for other people’s violence.
San Francisco's prohibitionists worried that opium dens were patronized by "young men and women of respectable parentage" as well as "the vicious and the depraved."
The Supreme Court's interpretation of the statute also could affect two charges against Donald Trump.
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.
It's a test of the unofficial coalition that's effectively ruling the House right now.
A recent case in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals highlights just how bloated PSLF eligibility has become.
A Cato Institute policy brief found that while licensed occupations see a nice bump in pay, licensing requirements lower wages for other similar occupations.
In 2021, the Associated Press uncovered rampant sexual abuse at FCI Dublin. After three years of failing to fix the problem, the Bureau of Prisons is shutting it down.
Plus: Zoning reform in Minnesota stalls, a New York housing "deal" does little for housing supply, and Colorado ends occupancy limits.
Plus: How matzo gets made, TikTok employees reporting to Beijing-based ByteDance, espionage concerns in Germany, and more...
The push to regulate social media content infringes on rights guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for examples of tasks the government does well (yikes).
The CDC’s numbers show that pain treatment is not responsible for escalating drug-related deaths.
Argentine President Javier Milei and Tesla CEO Elon Musk met for the first time in Austin, Texas, where they "agreed on the need for free markets."
The leading possibilities are all problematic in one way or another.
"I told everybody, 'Do what you want,'" Trump said on Friday night, as he let the deep state win again.
A shoddy effort to simplify the financial aid form led to errors affecting 30 percent of this year's FAFSA applications.
Reproductive freedom initiatives are advancing toward November ballots, putting the matter of abortion access in voters' hands.
One viewer said it should be illegal to take the Lord's name in vain on TV—and that was one of the more coherent complaints.
Plus: Trump's trial, MMA fighter trots out Mises, the forgotten canceling of Brendan Eich, and more...
U.S. need for Australia’s cooperation in the Pacific may win the journalist’s release.
Increased spending does not automatically equate to higher quality—something that is often lost in this debate.
Washington quietly funded Israeli-Iranian proxy wars for years. Now American men and women are directly involved.