Texas Ten Commandments Bill Is the Latest Example of Forcing Religious Texts In Public Schools
The Lone Star State's bill is already facing legal challenges.
The Lone Star State's bill is already facing legal challenges.
A strange sort of policy logic powers the new Disney remake.
Anthropology was once built around freewheeling interactions with alien peoples in far-flung lands.
Even readers who are profoundly distrustful of Jake Tapper should pick up a copy.
Swedish authorities voted to criminalize the purchase or procurement of online sex acts, in a move targeting customers of webcam platforms and sites like OnlyFans.
"Just go to North Korea for 10 days and you'll know how bad it is," says Charles Ryu.
Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby rightly decries the GOP's inclusion of a tax on remittances immigrant workers send to their families, in the "Big Beautiful Bill."
Author Sheena Michele Mason offers an alternative vision for anti-racism.
The deadlocked court doesn't provide much clarity to sticky questions about the limits of religious freedom.
Even simulated entrepreneurs aren't free from the burdens of business registration fees.
Errol Morris' new Netflix documentary explores alternative theories of the Manson cult's infamous 1969 murders.
On Monday, the court granted an emergency injunction allowing Rep. Laurel Libby to resume voting and speaking after she was censured for a post criticizing trans women in women's sports.
The last Pope Leo denounced state seizures of private property as "emphatically unjust."
In Operation Fool Around and Find Out, 244 "human trafficking" arrests, but no human trafficking.
Volokh's view gave breathing room for individuals' speech interests while leaving plenty of space for government to protect people from discrimination
Magician and podcaster Brian Brushwood talks about deception and skepticism while exploring historical hoaxes, the psychology of magic, the libertarian dystopia of Epcot, and the story behind World’s Greatest Con.
To protect America, maybe what we really need to fund is more Tom Cruise.
Conway, New Hampshire's attempt to force a local bakery to take down the mural "does not withstand any level of constitutional scrutiny," a judge ruled this week.
Plus: the tush push, Pete Rose, and Eddie Vedder.
Unfortunately, the data supports Americans’ take on the state of freedom in the world.
The lessons "America's Finest News Source" could offer the rest of the press.
"If a Greek family starts a pizzeria, if a Chinese family straight from Beijing opens a hot dog shop, are they appropriating or are they just smart?" says the Food for Thought author and former Good Eats host.
The Department of Education doesn’t handle teaching, set curricula, or pay teacher salaries.
The billionaire philanthropist explores how stoic philosophy shaped his views on capitalism, politics, and philanthropy, arguing for rational optimism, individual responsibility, and civil public discourse as foundations for life.
Tony Gilroy's series reminds us that an empire doesn't need dark magic to be evil.
"There is no typical divorce," writes No Fault author Haley Mlotek.
The government has been putting sexuality, sexual labor, and unorthodox ideas about sex on trial.
The president’s speech in Saudi Arabia promised a new course for U.S. policy in the Middle East. Can he deliver?
The evolutionary biologist challenges modern dogmas, defends scientific objectivity, and warns against the rise of ideological orthodoxy in society.
Nominees include stories on inflation breaking brains, America's first drug war, Afghans the U.S. left behind, Javier Milei, and much more.
There is no question that Rose defiantly broke the rules, but we love our baseball characters, warts and all.
"That guy isn't being trafficked by anyone," says sociologist Emily Horowitz.
Plus: Yetis, The Seat, and a political letter that will make your eyes roll.
A new bill would ban sharing visual content that might "arouse" or "titillate."
Some hospitals are even reporting women for testing positive for drugs that were given to them during labor.
Some players like the game to mimic the real world. Others like to play as Gandhi but nuke their enemies into oblivion.
Plus: Habemus papam, deporting grannies, and more...
Even in a fictitious postapocalyptic world, the government can't be trusted to tell the truth.
The animated Invincible series wrestles with the ethics of killing for the greater good.
The first American pope has a history of advocating for migrants' rights.
Progressives used to believe in building more stuff. Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson want to do that again.
Plus: Conclave time, land acknowledgements, deporting to Libya, and more...
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