Although it was narrowly drawn, United States v. Rahimi failed to protect Americans’ Second Amendment rights.
Joshua Mitchell
Recent
In several important ways, libertarianism needs to up its game.
A good Flannery O'Connor film is hard to find.
Planners want to use regulation to reshape the income landscape, but their machinations will only make the market inefficient and unfree.
The Founders knew that executive power was vital but dangerous in any republic.
In what could have been a blockbuster tax case, the Supreme Court left the big questions unanswered.
Any honest reading of our history must make one optimistic that, as we always have, Americans can get our act together.
The seventeenth century playwright had suggestions for what to do with young people who get lost in pretentious ideas and pursuits.
The children’s author turned gender commentator has been tweeting the UK through a moment of national madness.
A newsletter worth reading.
It would be a mistake for those who appreciate and value our constitutional experiment to object to the Court’s enforcement of the standing rule.
Advocates of the free market must build their themes into wider messages about the need for political and social renewal.
Despite a friendly NLRB tipping the scales, workers are increasingly rejecting labor organizers’ underhanded tactics.
Forty years after its release, The Killing Fields still demonstrates both the horrors of communism and the triumph of love.
The soft despotism of democratic ideology is corrupting higher ed. To push back, universities should rediscover their older, less-than-democratic ideals.
Concentrated economic power is a threat to liberty. But concentrated government power is even more so.