The Presidential Power of Printing Passports
When a Supreme Court Justice calls an entire city a “delicate subject,” there’s pretty much only one city he could be talking about. Burt Likko breaks down today’s division-of-powers decision.
When a Supreme Court Justice calls an entire city a “delicate subject,” there’s pretty much only one city he could be talking about. Burt Likko breaks down today’s division-of-powers decision.
Yet another Ordinary Times post addressing the tu quoque fallacy, or as I call it, the tu-quoque-fallacy fallacy.
A thought on the moral justice of the American Revolution.
Medicaid expansion would help with our policing problems: told you so edition
American Pharoah wins the Triple Crown. What horse racing means for the Bluegrass State and the moral dilemma it presents for race fans.
This week: Law, Outrage, Progress, Politics, Cities, and Society.
The ability for public schools to teach creationism might well be the next Religious Freedom debate.
What the LaCour case reveals has less to do with peer review, replication, or publishing in general, and more to do with the types of research that we value.
The man who shot George Zimmerman will be using Florida’s Stand Your Ground law as his defense.