Harvard and UNC Should Be Treated Differently
Neal McCluskey If we could have only gotten “yes, affirmative action,” or “no, affirmative action,” as the outcomes in Students for Fair Admissions
Neal McCluskey If we could have only gotten “yes, affirmative action,” or “no, affirmative action,” as the outcomes in Students for Fair Admissions
Gabriella Beaumont-Smith On July 4th, many Americans will take to the outdoors to celebrate the Declaration of Independence from my home nation, Great
Marc Joffe California and Florida now have approved budgets for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023, giving us the opportunity to compare
Chris Edwards Federal government spending is soaring and debt will soon reach record highs compared to the size of the economy. Rising spending
Thomas A. Berry Next term, the Supreme Court will decide two cases raising questions unique to the social media age. Many public officeholders
Jeffrey Miron This article appeared on SubStack on July 3, 2023. Last week Maine legalized the sale—but not the purchase—of prostitution services, becoming the
Clark Neily Last Thursday, the Supreme Court struck down President Biden’s student loan forgiveness program, finding that it was not plausibly authorized by
David Boaz Here we go again. Another “obituary” for libertarianism. While Salon Magazine declares that we all live in a “libertarian dystopia,” and
Thomas A. Berry Today the Supreme Court rejected President Biden’s massive debt‐forgiveness plan, holding that it was not authorized by the statute the
Colleen Hroncich LeDonna Griffin spent nearly 30 years in Omaha public schools as a teacher and administrator. So she’s seen it all—the good, the bad,