Radley Balko writes: [I]t’s worth remembering that the government initiates violence against its own citizens every day...
Jason Kuznicki
Jason Kuznicki is a research fellow at the Cato Institute and contributor of Cato Unbound. He's on twitter as JasonKuznicki. His interests include political theory and history.
The comments on Mark’s post below have grown to the point where I’m not sure I want...
…it’s authority. And fangs. The day will come when drug-hunting dogs will seem as cruel as human-hunting...
My former co-blogger Timothy Sandefur is spot-on here, regarding the GOP decision to read the Constitution in...
“These two former drug warriors, who spent their careers trying to enforce prohibition, think we should legalize...
Some long, rambling thoughts on what it means to be a libertarian. At least, if you’re me.
Among Christmas’s many other attributes, I think you could probably make the case that it is the...
If more potential jurors start turning down nonviolent drug cases, our drug laws will change.
Brad De Long proposes that if I’m arguing against congressional authority to regulate the health insurance industry,...
So yes, DADT has been repealed. A great day, and one that I feel confident history will...
If the federal government can force you to buy health insurance merely for being alive — on...
Start here, because it’s the most personally damning. Saith Eliezer Yudkowsky: The first virtue is curiosity. A...
I’ve gotten a lot of grief for my calling Eugene Volokh a significant opponent of same-sex marriage...
Heidegger asks: Would you be willing to go the record as one who categorically accepts civil, legal,...
My Cato colleague says it better than I could. A must-read post.
This makes me incredibly happy.
Mike Farmer writes: One of the the things I like about the concept of Wikileaks is having...
One side effect of the Wikileaks controversy is how it’s fracturing the Tea Party movement. On the...
I remember several years ago the Volokh Conspiracy invited Maggie Gallagher as a guest poster. The commentariat...
This month at Cato Unbound, Daniel Klein touches on a topic I’ve long found fascinating — Where...