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  • February 19, 2003
    Washington Times
    Unsafe Driving Blind Spot
    … of Michigan economist Michelle White. Miss White managed to secure data regarding each and every automotive accident reported to the police between 1995–99. She examined three types of crashes: those involving two vehicles, those involving a single vehicle, and …
    By Jerry Taylor
  • February 4, 2003
    Washington Times
    Stop! Don’t Ditch Your SUV Just Yet
    … of Michigan economist Michelle White. Miss White managed to secure data regarding each and every automotive accident reported to the police between 1995–99. She examined three types of crashes: those involving two vehicles, those involving a single vehicle, and …
    By Jerry Taylor
  • October 4, 2017
    Reason.com
    A Few Thoughts on the Catalan Independence Referendum
    … the Court’s ruling and decided to hold the plebiscite anyway. The Spanish government responded by sending in the national police and the referendum was, for all practical purposes, derailed – amid some violence. With regard to the crackdown, a couple …
    By Marian L. Tupy
  • September 16, 2015
    Blog
    Pope Francis and Criminal Justice
    … thousands of people are incarcerated in this country for non-violent drug offenses. Countless innocent people, whether suspects, bystanders, or police officers have lost their lives in the name of prohibition. And America’s drug policies have not just created …
    By Tim Lynch
  • September 12, 2011
    Blog
    Cooling out the Marks in Uncle Sam’s Ponzi Schemes
    … gain in experience and to say and do nothing about his venture. He may feel moved to complain to the police or to chase after the operators. In the terminology of the trade, the mark may squawk, beef, or come …
    By Michael F. Cannon
  • August 19, 2011
    Blog
    Deport Criminals, Not Students and Needed Workers
    … undocumented spouses of U.S. military personnel, immigrants who were snared in the system when they actually reported crimes to police, and students who came to the United States as young children with their undocumented parents—students who would be …
    By Daniel Griswold
  • May 7, 2011
    Blog
    Martin Feldstein on the Defense Budget
    … a moral obligation to defend our allies. …. There are those who say the United States should not be the global policeman. But if not us, who? As the only democratic superpower with the ability to defend and punish, do we …
    By William A. Niskanen
  • December 18, 2007
    Blog
    Defeat Terrorism
    … Please start scaling back the official government war on terror. Please replace it with a smaller, more focused anti‐​terrorist police effort in keeping with the rule of law. Please stop overreacting. I understand that it will not be possible …
    By Jim Harper
  • April 24, 2024
    Legal Briefs
    United States v. Pheasant
    United States v. Pheasant
    … and the nondelegation doctrine’s intelligible principle test. Vagueness review is applied when a law gives too much discretion to police and prosecutors, while the nondelegation doctrine concerns laws giving too much discretion to rulemakers. Both of these standards enforce …
    By Thomas A. Berry and Alexander Khoury
  • Spring 2024
    Regulation
    Good Fences? Good Luck
    Good Fences? Good Luck
    The open-fields doctrine gives government vast powers to invade nearly 96 percent of all US private land.
    By Joshua Windham and David Warren
  • September 13, 2019
    Lobelog
    Afghanistan: A Failure to Tell the Truth
    That presidents are confronted with such unanimity is a monumental failure of executive branch policymaking.
    By John Glaser and John Mueller
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