Mike Rowe on Well-Paying Dirty Jobs, Nonprofit Whiskey, and Male Decline
The country's favorite blue-collar champion calls attention to the 'skills gap' and asks why young men spend so much time online.
The country's favorite blue-collar champion calls attention to the 'skills gap' and asks why young men spend so much time online.
What should governments, private companies, and individuals do differently next time disaster strikes?
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic with Institute for Progress founder Alec Stapp.
The anti-vax environmental lawyer is not worthy of the rehabilitation tour he's getting from pundits and podcasters.
The environmentalist and anti-vaccine activist talks about his presidential run and whether he'd jail climate change skeptics.
RFK Jr. on libertarianism, Tulsi Gabbard, conspiracy theories, drugs, guns, free speech, and more
Global warming is an issue. But there are other pressing problems that deserve the world's attention.
though the city may yet prevail later in the case, if it can show enough facts justifying the mandate.
So the California Court of Appeal has held, concluding that there is enough of a factual dispute (under California's plaintiff-friendly pleading standards) for the case to go forward.
A new review suggests modest incentives appear to have positive effects on vaccine uptake.
Whether the putative target is the "biomedical security state," wokeness, "Big Tech censors," or Chinese Communists, the presidential candidate’s grandstanding poses a clear threat to individual rights.
Democrats spent tens of millions of dollars last year's midterms meddling in Republican primaries. Republicans may now be borrowing a page from their playbook.
The former president reminds us that claiming unbridled executive power is a bipartisan tendency.
"If you don't trust central authority, then you should see this immediately as something that is very problematic," says the Florida governor.
Here are three people whose record on COVID-19 shouldn't be forgotten.
It's been over for most Americans for a long time already.
A recent study finds that human challenge trials are largely safe.
The last vestiges of the Biden administration's pandemic mandates are disappearing on May 11.
Such family court decisions are generally reviewed with great deference; the court isn't saying the judge's decision is necessarily the correct one, just that it's not clearly incorrect.
The enemy of your enemy is not your friend; he's a guy who might want to throw you in jail.
Fauci says public officials should have listened to other advisers and made better decisions. That's true! It's also incredibly frustrating.
We owe this achievement to a combination of Covid vaccines and Biden Administration policy changes. But much more can be done.
A panel upheld a preliminary objection barring the Air force from requiring religious objectors to get Covid-19 vaccines, and a majority of the court's judges refused to vacate that decision as moot.
Thanks to onerous regulations, life-saving drugs are more expensive and harder to get.
The Kentucky Republican also expressed disappointment that Congress has not repealed the war on terror authorization of military force.
The Sixth Circuit rejects a suit against the jam maker for requiring employees to get the jab.
The outspoken critic of the CDC and FDA explains what went wrong—and what went right—with COVID policy.
Join Reason on YouTube at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of mRNA vaccines and America's public health establishment with UCSF's Vinay Prasad.
More than four months after President Joe Biden declared the pandemic to be over, the White House is fighting efforts to lift lingering and nonsensical COVID rules.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. ET for a discussion of the Facebook Files with Robby Soave.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit concludes the President exceeded the scope of his delegated authority.
Data show Florida and New York had similar death numbers despite vastly different approaches.
Plus: Would Adam Smith be a libertarian if he were alive today?
The company's broad definition of "misleading information" and its deference to authority invited censorship by proxy.
College students should be able to use their own judgment on COVID boosters, not be forced into them by learning institutions.
In times of public health crises, government red tape and misguided communication make matters worse.
From the sounds of it, the Air Force's attorneys didn't think too carefully about how to respond to Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) claims.
The president has urged the Chinese government to respect the rights of anti-lockdown demonstrators. He actively encouraged the Canadian government to end the trucker protests.
The ice cream's innovative freezers helped Pfizer keep COVID-19 vaccines stable during transit.
Plus: ACLU in court over law criminalizing school behavior, Twitter losing heavy users, and more...
Blue states may require the vaccine after the CDC recommends it, stripping families of a choice that should be theirs.
Why should low-income children be the only ones still forced to wear masks?
We’re likely to be poorer, distrustful, and less free for years to come.
Behind the scenes, federal officials pressure social media platforms to suppress disfavored speech.
Gov. Jay Inslee says Washington state's COVID-19 emergency will finally come to an end on October 31.
The lesson here: Public health messaging needs to be clear and specific. Oh, and federal bureaucracy sucks, as usual.