United States v. Berry Brief: Post-Dismissal Civil Commitment Exceeds the Bounds of Federal Power
Mike Fox and Matthew Cavedon In 2015, Duane Berry was charged with a single count of conveying false information and hoaxes—a federal property
Friday Feature: Edovate Learning
Colleen Hroncich Home education has a deep and rich tradition predating any other educational model. Despite this, it became illegal in many states
International Economic Chaos: Trump’s Remade Global Order
James Bacchus While President Trump takes a victory lap following the capitulation of many of America’s trading partners to his arbitrary trade demands
Senator Hawley’s Tariff “Rebate” Scheme
Tad DeHaven Except for Rand Paul, Senate Republicans have responded to President Trump’s schizophrenic tariff policy with a mix of acquiescence, mild pushback,
Trump’s Debanking Order Calls for Investigation, Something Tennessee Should Have Done
Nicholas Anthony
Poll: Nearly 1 in 4 Americans Think They Have a Personal Social Security Account
Emily Ekins and Hunter Johnson 55% of Americans don’t know how Social Security is funded, 79% don’t believe they’ll receive their full benefit
America’s Not-So-Secret Secret Police
Patrick G. Eddington In the pre–Trump 2.0 era, it was a relatively simple matter to determine which federal law enforcement agency (LEA) had
Case v. Montana Brief: Limit Loopholes to the Fourth Amendment
Christine Marsden The Founders envisioned the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement as a strong wall safeguarding citizens’ lives and property. Over time, its protections
Closing the Primary Care Gap
Jeffrey A. Singer With wait times for primary care averaging nearly three weeks, states should consider removing barriers that prevent qualified non-physician practitioners









