Congress Reopens the Government—and Reignites Prohibition
Jeffrey A. Singer Last night, the Senate passed a continuing resolution along with three appropriations bills, one of which, an agriculture appropriations bill,
How Setting the Grand Teton Speed Record Nearly Landed a Dog Dad in the Doghouse
Mike Fox
Barnes v. Felix Brief: Juries, Not Judges, Need to Decide the Reasonableness of Force
Matthew Cavedon
NEW Book: School Choice Long Preceded Friedman and Brown, and Remains for Reasons Well Beyond Them
Neal McCluskey It’s curious: Both opponents and proponents of school choice—government funding myriad options families select, not just government schools—often write like the
How Biden’s Thrifty Food Plan Change Broke SNAP’s Cost Controls
Romina Boccia and Tyler Turman
Weiying Zhang: China Needs Free Markets for Future Development
James A. Dorn Fifteen years ago, Weiying Zhang, a distinguished professor of economics at Peking University, published a path-breaking book, The Logic of
AI and Healthcare: A Policy Framework for Innovation, Liability, and Patient Autonomy—Part 2
Jeffrey A. Singer
Friday Feature: Chesterton Schools Network
Colleen Hroncich When the first Chesterton Academy opened its doors nearly two decades ago, there was no grand plan to build a national









