He Ended New York City's Insane Ban on Pinball
Austin Bragg and Meredith Bragg talk Remy, libertarian parodies, and their new indie film, Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game.
Austin Bragg and Meredith Bragg talk Remy, libertarian parodies, and their new indie film, Pinball: The Man Who Saved the Game.
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The Columbia University linguist discusses the Jussie Smollett hoax, Donald Trump, and "antiracism" as a new secular religion.
Episode 3 of Free Speech Rules, starring UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh
How established businesses use government to limit competition.
In Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society, Nicholas Christakis says our common humanity outweighs divisive tribalism.
Allison Schrager wants to change the way you take chances.
People claim breakfast is the "most important meal of the day." But it's not.
Should Israel negotiate with Hamas and Fatah, or are they unwavering enemies in a protracted struggle?
When "somebody packs up that moving van in Chicago, Illinois, they don't lose their skills on the way to the state of Arizona," says Gov. Doug Ducey.
Media personalities claim socialism didn't cause Venezuela's collapse, but it did. Here's how.
Q&A with political strategist Liz Mair.
When quality of life improved, doctors discovered a new affliction.
The editor of a journal that fell for a hoax defends his field.
Q&A with the co-founder of Institute for Justice about immigration, his legal philosophy, his battles with Sheriff Joe Arpaio, and that tattoo.
Rep Ocasio-Cortez and her progressive followers think taxing the rich at 70% will bring in lots of tax money. It won't.
Is "mental illness" a fraudulent concept for locking up social deviants? Or does forced treatment free the ill "from the Bastille of their psychosis?"
"The real battle in the Democratic Party is between reality and fantasy," says Chapman University's Joel Kotkin.
Former BB&T Bank CEO John Allison vs. Moody's Mark Zandi
Sugar subsidies are welfare for the rich. They cost consumers billions a year.
Easing pot prohibition is doing what the failed war on drugs never could.
Episode 2 of Free Speech Rules by UCLA Law Professor Eugene Volokh
Q&A with economist Veronique de Rugy.
After Cody Wilson was arrested on a sex crime charge, Heindorff took the helm at Defense Distributed. Now she's leading a massive free speech battle over the right to download a gun.
There are more forms of hepatitis than there are major parties in America.
San Francisco encourages homelessness by limiting housing, offering generous welfare, and failing to enforce basic laws.
The senator and presidential hopeful went to bat for dirty prosecutors, opposed marijuana legalization, and championed policies that endanger sex workers.
Sports stadiums get billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies.
They demanded higher salaries. The real problem: A disconnect between what teachers see in their paychecks and what employers are actually paying them.
"School is a place where children go to learn to be stupid," said author and educator John Holt.
The Manhattan Institute's Howard Husock debates Economic Policy Institute's Richard Rothstein at the Soho Forum.
Stossel in the Classroom offers teachers free videos.
Shutdown teaches us that much of government is NOT essential.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein's latest bill classifies firearms not by what they do but based on how they look.
Nancy Bass Wyden says historic designation would compromise her ownership rights and mean dealing with bureaucrats who "do not know how to run a bookstore."
Asians sue Harvard for discrimination in a case that may end college racial preferences.
Bob Tillman has spent nearly 5 years and $1.4 million trying to convert his laundromat into new housing.
Deck the halls and spread some Yuletide cheer. Or don't. You're your own person.
Tune in to Reason's livestream conversation between Gillespie and Shermer.
Tune in to Reason's livestream with the co-creator of the YouTube channel 1791.
Reason's livestream with the founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), Rick Doblin.
Government plays Santa Claus with your tax money.
Reason's livestream conversation with Lenore Skenazy.
New film The Creepy Line argues that tech giants sometimes silence conservatives and try to steer America left.