Brnovich’s tuition lawsuit has merit. But the AG shouldn’t have free range to sue other state officials over policy disagreements.
What would a federal crime of domestic terrorism actually accomplish?
The federal criminal code shouldn’t be further laden to satisfy a desire to “do something” about mass shootings unless it would really do something about mass shootings.
Big business invites European-style regulation
The Business Roundtable issues a statement demoting the interests of shareholders. There are political consequences from that.
The fracturing consensus on immigration and welfare
The Trump’s administration’s expansion of the public charge ban on immigration wouldn’t do much. But the reaction to it is revealing.
Cops should more heavily patrol the social media beat
What mass shooters have in common is profound social alienation. There are places on the internet where such people gather.
Breaking up big tech won’t solve the problem
Give users control of their data, but otherwise leave big tech alone.
The Fed’s inconsistency and Libra’s promise
While a debate breaks out about limiting how the Fed manages monetary policy, Facebook proposes a competitive digital currency.
What the mass shooting blame game gets wrong
What mass shooters have in common is social alienation, not politics. The blame game obscures that.
Contrary to Brnovich, the time is actually ripe to abolish the dealth penalty
If the state has to resort to subterfuge and smuggling to obtain the means of execution, it’s time to make life in prison the ultimate punishment.
Prop. 105 would accomplish one big thing
While there is much to dislike in Prop. 105, it will stop Phoenix from pouring good money after bad in fixed rail.