The NCAA’s NIL rules are complicated and contradictory. It’s time to treat athletes the same as other students.
One 1958 Plymouth Sedan v. Pennsylvania
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The Federal Trade Commission is redundant, inefficient, and often counterproductive.
For George Washington at least, the American Revolution was a battle against regulation without representation.
At the Supreme Court, among scholars and in the public square, this last year has shown originalism’s growing influence.
The left is outraged over the Trump administration’s withholding of federal funds from Columbia University. But where did that power come from?
The Korean War provides an unappreciated look at some of the dynamics of US foreign policy playing out today.
A few reforms could revitalize one of America's great sports.
America needs economic growth to get out of our debt crisis—and a truly deregulatory agenda can help.
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Our Middle East failures do not represent the true legacy of American foreign policy.
In his new book, Justice Neil Gorsuch shows the danger the administrative state poses to genuine self-government.
In the wake of soft despotism, Tocqueville warned of even more malevolent possibilities.
Forty years after its premiere, John Hughes’s high school masterpiece still expresses the freedom-loving ethos of Generation X.
Instead of pursuing minor cuts here and there, policymakers must address structural factors, including the budgeting process.
Dishonesty now poses a real threat to the credibility of scientific research.