"People have been trying to do conversion therapy for 100 years with no record of success," Colorado's solicitor general told the justices, citing opposition by groups like the American Medical ...
The people who did the targeting should be punished and, more importantly, have their toys taken away: no more secret watchlists.
He discovered that eight states now ban retail sales of dogs, cats, and rabbits. Animal activists want the bans extended to all states. They say this is needed to save animals (and protect pet buyers) ...
Weakening or removing Section 230 would not fix the problems of social media, and in fact it could make things worse.
With fewer immigrant workers available on American farms, there is a risk of "supply shock-induced food shortages," the Labor Department says.
Next week, if the Supreme Court decides to reach the merits in the U.S. v. Ellingburg case, it should recognize that restitution to crime victims serves compensatory rather than penal purposes.
Industry insiders dominate the boards that control who can work, using government power to shut out competitors, protect profits, and block reform.
A new FinCEN rule forced small money services businesses to collect personal data on nearly every customer transaction. Lawsuits claim this violates the Fourth Amendment.
The Chicago City Council unanimously approved a $90 million settlement to resolve 176 lawsuits brought by 180 people who were wrongfully convicted and collectively spent nearly 200 years behind bars.
From State v. Every, decided by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals yesterday, in an opinion by Justice John ...
The policy would slow innovation, reduce competitiveness, and leave American workers unprepared for the future.
On the one hand, when politicians are asked by the press or individual voters are surveyed, support for new housing tends to look pretty good. Large majorities say housing costs are too high, and more ...