
The conservative justices seemed likely to confer broad presidential immunity from prosecution – and in a way that would further delay any federal trial.
On Wednesday, Donald Trump met with New York union leader Bobby Bartels. As the head of Steamfitters Local 638, Bartels said his fellow working-class, blue-collar union members were leaning heavily towards Trump in the presidential election. Traditionally, union members have voted more heavily for Democrats. This time, Trump’s stand on issues like immigration, crime, and […]
For the last decade or two, Hollywood, like the rest of America, has been marked by a sex recession. Depictions of lovemaking, not long ago a fixture of big-screen productions, all but went away. Nudity practically disappeared, especially in big-budget productions. The number of studio-produced romantic comedies dwindled. Children’s films dropped lovestruck princess plots that […]
After the California Assembly’s Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee recently voted 11-0 to support a far-reaching, speech-quelling, lawsuit-promoting bill in the name of protecting “the children,” Assemblymember Joe Patterson (R–Rocklin) posted this on X: “The most simple bill ever and I was pleased to support it after a lot of heartburn. All the bill says is […]
4/26/1995: U.S. v. Lopez decided. The post Today in Supreme Court History: April 26, 1995 appeared first on Reason.com.
You have to respect anybody willing to tell powerful government officials to get stuffed, and tech titan Elon Musk is pretty good at doing exactly that. While sometimes thin-skinned himself and not always consistent in his free speech principles, the head of social media platform X (formerly Twitter) is the best of the bunch among […]
The European Union could move as much as €200 billion ($215 billion) a year into the real economy if the bloc improves the way savings are targeted, former European Central Bank policymaker Christian Noyer said.
About three decades ago, a group of Citigroup Inc. dealmakers including Donald Mackenzie, Steven Koltes and Rolly van Rappard left the Wall Street giant to strike out on their own.
Nigerian banking stocks have lost more than a quarter of their value since the central bank announced a new minimum capital threshold that will force them to issue new shares.