Minimum wage laws don't have to be politically divisive. Can minimum wage policy achieve shared goals and values?
Minimum wage laws don't have to be politically divisive. Can minimum wage policy achieve shared goals and values?
Minimum wage laws don't have to be politically divisive. Can minimum wage policy achieve shared goals and values?
In order to vastly expand the regulatory state, the Biden administration is using fake cost-benefit ratios to make its regulations seem less costly and more beneficial. This is clearly fraudulent, but no bureaucrat will be charged with any crimes.
Ryan and Tho are joined by Mises Institute Senior Editor Bill Anderson to discuss Donald Trump's conviction.
Federal judges seem never to have heard of the American Revolution, fought to overthrow these very ideas of "sovereignty," which these judges now proclaim.
Thomas A. Berry and Alexander Khoury New York City has maintained a system of rent control since the 1940s. Property owners in the city are subject to a thicket of regulations that affect their ability to lease and limit their right to exclude—arguably the most fundamental right in
David Inserra A proposed amendment to this year’s National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) strays a little far from the mark of supporting military readiness or countering threats our military may face on the battlefield. Instead, it mandates that social media companies describe in detail exactly how they
Thomas A. Berry, Brent Skorup, and Nathaniel Lawson “Qualified immunity” is a special legal protection for government officials, but it is not absolute. Officials are still liable for damages if they violate clearly established law. Unfortunately, in a recent case involving the arrest and prosecution of a local journalist
While our political “leaders” insist that the government is “protecting” us, it offers the same kind of “protection” that mobsters offer: pay us to “protect” you, or we burn down your place with you in it.