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The law is a warning shot before a shower of similar state AI bills. It also reflects a flawed view of federalism: State legislators cite congressional "inaction" to justify meddling in national ...
Reports of human rights abuses are piling up as the number of people in immigrant detention reaches all-time highs.
Since returning to office in January, Trump has floated several deals that would involve the feds taking a piece of an American company.
The DOJ blocked Spirit's merger with JetBlue in 2022 over concerns about market consolidation, but markets also consolidate when failing firms go bankrupt and exit.
U.S. authorities are secretly tracking shipments of advanced AI chips from manufacturers such as Dell, Super Micro, Nvidia, and AMD to prevent their illegal diversion to China.
Michael Hayes, a Lakeland, Florida, police detective, was arrested for falsely reporting a crime, a first-degree misdemeanor.
If a Democratic president tried to so directly politicize an independent agency, Republicans would be screaming about the coming tyranny.
Offending government officials—even when it involves saying awful things—is a time-honored practice in the United States.
The president's revenue-sharing agreement on chip sales to China may pass legal muster, paving the way for effective export tariffs.
A report affirms that greenhouse gases are warming the planet, but also found no strong evidence that extreme weather has become more frequent or intense.
Universities’ internal culture wars threaten free speech and inquiry, but political attacks on research funding and infrastructure are crippling U.S. scientific leadership.
Officials from the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries seized and euthanized the deer, then fined the family $1,600.
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