Reason

Catherine Salgado | April 1, 2024

One legal expert is telling Americans that abridgment, not coercion, is the standard in a landmark free speech rights case.

Philip Hamburger, a Columbia University legal scholar and CEO of the New Civil Liberties Alliance, took on what he…

Catherine Salgado | December 22, 2023

As Big Tech censorship continues unabated, a new study has found that Americans — particularly conservatives — are increasingly self-censoring.

Reason reported on Dec. 12 about data published in June in Political Science Quarterly showing…

Catherine Salgado | January 24, 2023

An ongoing lawsuit alleging Big Tech-government collusion led to the unveiling of “The Facebook Files,” a trove of documents exposing the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s sordid influence over Facebook and Instagram’s bloated…

Gabriela Pariseau | August 24, 2022

The Babylon Bee Editor-in-Chief Kyle Mann told Reason Editor-at-Large Nick Gillespie why his company has refused to delete the infamous tweet that got it kicked off Twitter.

Twitter gave The Babylon Bee the boot in March when it tweeted…

Joseph Vazquez | August 9, 2019

What should campaign funding disclosure levels be in an internet age and outrage culture, where publicization of giving can quickly turn into harassment?

It’s a question The New York Times raised after Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-TX)…

Sam Dorman | July 8, 2016

Hillary Clinton’s proposal to spend $350 billion on “affordable” tuition may have been outrageous, but at least it provoked some poignant comments on the pitfalls of big government.

On July 6, Clinton proposed…