Wednesday, 30 June 2021

The Stealthy Economic Radicalism of Joe Biden's Boring Presidency

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The latest news and analysis from Reason.com
Wednesday, June 30, 2021

The Stealthy Economic Radicalism of Joe Biden's Boring Presidency
Even the president's most entrenched political opposition cannot seem to find much to engage or enrage.
By Peter Suderman

A New Case Gives the Supreme Court a Chance To Defend Gun Rights
It's likely that soon, almost all Americans will be legally able to carry guns.
By John Stossel

Critical Race Theory Can't Be Banned. It Can Be Exposed, Mocked, and Avoided.
The semantics battle obscures reasonable objections to antiracist diversity seminars.
By Robby Soave

FOSTA's Failure: The 2018 Sex Trafficking Law Has Been Worse Than Useless So Far
The only thing FOSTA has done is chill speech and make catching sex traffickers more difficult.
By Elizabeth Nolan Brown

Check Out Reddit’s AMA With Reason’s Editor-in-Chief Katherine Mangu-Ward Tomorrow, July 1st at 3 pm ET.


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Did Congress Give the CDC More Authority Than the President?
The agency’s legal defense of its eviction moratorium implies that it has vast powers to order Americans around.
By Jacob Sullum

At Least 5 Justices Seem To Think the CDC's Eviction Moratorium Is Illegal. SCOTUS Left It in Place Anyway.
Brett Kavanaugh, who provided a crucial fifth vote, said he agrees that the CDC does not have the authority to override rental contracts.
By Jacob Sullum

House Votes To Repeal 1957 and 1991 Authorizations for the Use of Military Force
Repeal would do little to change how Congress and the president collaborate—or don't—on military operations.
By Fiona Harrigan



The Publication of the Pentagon Papers Still Sets an Example 50 Years Later
Whistleblowers and publishers are crucial for keeping government officials reasonably honest.
By J.D. Tuccille

RIP Mike Gravel, Unapologetic Opponent of War and Star of Absurdist Presidential Campaign Ads
A heterodox hero and committed antiwar activist, the former Alaska senator put the Pentagon Papers in the public record.
By Eric Boehm

In an Unprecedented Heat Wave, Portland's Lingering COVID Restrictions Hurt Bars and Restaurants Again
The state, one of the last to fully reopen, lifted some capacity limits early. But the service sector was hamstrung during a heat crisis in which it could have helped.
By Jacob Grier

Image credit: Sipa USA/Newscom

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