3 Supreme Court Cases To Watch in June 2025
Plus: The glorious return of drive-in movie season.
Plus: The glorious return of drive-in movie season.
"Anarchism and democracy are—or should be—largely identical," wrote the anthropologist David Graeber.
Are outdated laws ripe for abuse? A listener asks whether it's time to sunset certain old laws.
The Department of Justice brought the deported Salvadoran back to U.S. soil for trial, reversing its long-held contention that he would "never" return.
Michael Mendenhall wants the Supreme Court to reconsider a precedent that allows home invasions based on nothing but hearsay.
The proposed 2,500-mile pipeline would transfer carbon dioxide from ethanol plants in five states to a permanent storage site in North Dakota.
The result is the same: attacks on tech companies and attempts to violate Americans' rights.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei is petitioning the government to throw roadblocks in his rivals' way.
The White House may be setting us up for a new wave of police abuses—and necessary calls for reform.
The libertarians aren't in charge. But the lesson of the last decade of politics is that they should be.
Karoline Leavitt's threat against ABC News is an attack on free speech.
Those accused of wrongdoing have the right to challenge the evidence against them before the government takes away their liberty.
Most imports to the U.S. are raw materials, intermediate parts, or equipment—the stuff that manufacturing firms need to make things.
A genomics PhD and conservative bioethicist debate the ethics of in vitro fertilization and discuss recent scientific advancements in reproductive medicine.
Neither Russia nor Ukraine has a clear path to victory. The Ukrainian drone attack last week and the Russian air raids on Friday don't change that.
Sen. Blackburn introduced a bill this week that would make it a crime to publish the name of a federal law enforcement officer.
Next week could be a pivotal one, as a federal appeals court could decide whether to restore an injunction against Trump's tariffs.
The case against Michelino Sunseri exemplifies the injustice caused by the proliferation of regulatory crimes—the target of a recent presidential order.
Vicki Baker's legal odyssey is finally coming to an end.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the school’s handling of campus antisemitism violated civil rights law and is grounds for revoking accreditation.
Former Rusk County deputy Shane Iverson can now be sued for the 2022 fatal shooting of Timothy Michael Randall, who was fleeing a traffic stop.
From financing eminent domain abuses in Tennessee to climate-friendly ketchup, the Biden administration approved billions of dollars in wasteful spending.
In a petty, public war of words, Trump threatens to cut off federal support to Musk's companies after the billionaire attacked his deficit-busting budget bill.
The court ruled on Thursday that a heterosexual woman shouldn't have to clear a higher bar than a gay colleague to sue for discrimination.
The State Department is eliminating the CARE office and ending the Enduring Welcome program, stranding U.S. allies who risked their lives and were told America would protect them.
Italy is full of treasures from the ancient world, but its government is discouraging their discovery.
In 1968, the feds thought that the boxing champion—and future grill salesman—could be a potent weapon against the left.
Plus: A cynical take on Zohran Mamdani, Florida's drinking water threatened, and more...
Ailing Americans are winning expanded freedom to try experimental medicine.
The limited-run Netflix series is fueling a real-life push for the British government to protect kids from online dangers.
Daredevil's nemesis Kingpin runs up against local government bureaucracy.
Unanimous rulings on discrimination, guns, and religion once again challenge the common media narrative that the Court is hopelessly polarized.
In a 1978 appearance at Utah State University, the Nobel Prize–winning economist provided the perfect retort to those who blindly argue we should "build in America."
A new study on the trustworthiness of PBS fails to persuade.
Sandy Martinez was fined for a parking violation on her own property, driveway cracks, and a storm-damaged fence.
In order to perform his famous 737 stunt, Fielder had to navigate around flight-hour requirements that critics say don't improve safety but do cause a shortage of pilots.
A federal court in Florida will consider whether chatbot output is First Amendment-protected speech.
Without such intervention, he warns, the government "could snatch anyone off the street, turn him over to a foreign country, and then effectively foreclose any corrective course of action."
"The income gap really was the main driver that showed up over and over again," said one researcher.
A new comprehensive review finds the negative effects of trade with China have been significantly exaggerated.
Plus: Trump's travel ban, NYC mayor candidate cites bad stats on child hunger, and more...
Plus: A love letter to the heavy metal band Slayer.
Fusionism holds that virtue and liberty are mutually reinforcing, and that neither is possible in any lasting or meaningful way without the other.
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