Dollarization’s Critics Are Ignoring the Evidence
Daniel Raisbeck and Gabriela Calderon de Burgos After paying little attention to dollarization in Latin America for
San Francisco Loses Tens of Millions of Dollars on Cable Car Service
Marc Joffe If you’ve visited San Francisco recently, you know that a ride on the city’s famous cable
Google’s Antitrust Trial Starts: What’s at Stake and Why This Case Matters
Jennifer Huddleston The antitrust cases against Google brought by the Department of Justice (DOJ) and several state
Time for Pandemic Emergency Spending to End
David Boaz New exercises of federal spending power are often justified on the basis of some emergency.
A Backlash Against First Amendment Standing?
Walter Olson When the Supreme Court ruled 6–3 this June in 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis that
Is the DC Department of Health Embarking on a Disinformation Campaign to Snuff Out Tobacco Harm Reduction?
Jeffrey A. Singer The District of Columbia Department of Health recently posted a message on “X” to get
The U.S. Experience in Colombia Is a Terrible Model for Dealing With Fentanyl
Justin Logan Friday afternoon, Daniel Raisbeck and I published a longish article in Foreign Policy magazine throwing cold water
Maryland’s Certificate-of-Need Law for Higher Education
Walter Olson I’ve got a new article in Reason on an unusual regulatory arrangement in Maryland that requires
Friday Feature: Streams of Hope Christian School
Colleen Hroncich One of the great things about the increase in microschools, hybrid schools, and similar options
No Straight Comparison But a Promising Direction for Ukraine Assistance
Jordan Cohen and Jonathan Ellis Allen The Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German think tank, has