You cannot understand what’s going on with American politics today without it
Missouri v. Biden will test the government’s ability to suppress speech in the name of fighting ‘misinformation’
Thirteen ways of looking at disinformation
Allowing zealots to censor news in the name of ‘science’ is a danger to public health
How government, tech, finance, and law enforcement converged into an all-knowing criminalization complex—and how to resist it
The purpose of free speech is to give the marginalized an escape hatch from the status quo, not to entrench political power
After the COVID ‘misinformation’ experience, will the vice president’s new plan for addressing online harassment go any better?
Using accusations of ‘disinformation’ to suppress scientific criticism, steer media coverage, and silence political opponents is not part of the operating system of a free society
How to make our public commons accountable to more than a few controlling shareholders
And can white people suffer racial discrimination under federal law? The questions are more complex, and unsettled, than they may appear.
The case of notorious internet troll ‘Ricky Vaughn’
Attempts by Jewish groups to stop a panel of anti-Israel speakers at UMass are misguided and bound to backfire
A sitting American justice from the state of the Pittsburgh massacre speaks out on First Amendment rights, Christchurch, and the dangers of a pivotal moment in our history
The legal case that yeshiva educational standards are unconstitutional is gaining influence even as it loses in the courts, and could have far-reaching consequences
A return to the early-1990s origins of victimization in identity politics, then—and now—a distraction from the real challenges of structural and institutional racism in America
For Banned Books Week, a perfume company is selling scents tied to landmark events in censorship, both of which involved prominent Jewish figures
Is banning the use of public money to support companies that boycott Israel unconstitutional and illegal?
Ruling has precedence; New Yorkers ‘tolerant,’ says judge