Aella counters Anna Khachiyan's critique of the sexual revolution
"The sexual revolution is the winner of the culture war. We finally found a way to have it all, and yet we're still not happy," Anna Khachiyan said at the recent sexual revolution debate hosted by @thefreepress and @TheFIREorg.
Watch the full replay of Aella's live conversation with Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe: youtube.com/watch?v=BsL1FgOVsXA&t=394s
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How tariffs hurt Americans
Tariffs are really just taxes on imported goods. Trump and Biden love them, even though 93% of tariffs are paid for by American consumers, not China.
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Remy: Look What You Made Me Do (Taylor Swift Parody)
Lawmakers find culprits for the recent uptick in theft—the victims.
Parody of Taylor Swift's "Look What You Made Me Do" written and performed by Remy.
LYRICS
I was on a walk so brisk
Just minding my business
Out with my walking stick
Can't you see? Innocently…
But I'm just human, oh it's true yes, I am just a man
What else could one do seeing luggage in a minivan?
I have no choice in the matter, do you not understand?
I check it once, then I check it twice, ah!
Ooh, look what you made me do
Look what you made me do
Look what you just made me do
Look what you just made me…
They don't want to steal whiskey
But he must feed his family
My newborn loves Pappy
He's a boy, and he likes blue…
How do you expect someone not to shatter all this glass?
When he sees this while only carrying the 14 Max?
Any chance you might step up to defend property rights?
I check it once, and I check it twice, hmm
Ooh, look what I always do
Look what I always do
Just look at what I like to
Look at what I like to do
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Is there too much porn?
"We have made the difficult decision to block access to our site in Mississippi and Virginia, as we have also recently done in Utah," reads a June 30 statement from Pornhub, the world's second-most trafficked porn site and the thirteenth most trafficked site overall.
Pornhub was reacting to the passage of age-verification laws passed in those three states. Similar laws have passed in Louisiana, Texas, Montana, and Arkansas, leading Politico to declare that "A Simple Law is Doing the Impossible. It's Making the Porn Industry Retreat." The industry is fighting back, however, and won a preliminary injunction against Texas' law.
JoinReason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe this Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern on Reason's YouTube channel or Facebook page as they discuss the anti-porn laws with sex worker and data scientist Aella. They'll also talk about the psychological literature examining online porn consumption, the privacy implications of age verification laws, and a recent debate Aella attended hosted by the Free Press and FIREabout the effects of "the sexual revolution" on American society.
PornHub statement on new age verification laws, June 30, 2023: https://twitter.com/Pornhub/status/1674774396773318658
Reason: In Scathing Rulings, Federal Courts Block Arkansas and Texas Age Verification Laws, September 1, 2023: https://reason.com/2023/09/01/in-scathing-rulings-federal-courts-block-arkansas-and-texas-age-verification-laws/
Preliminary injunction in NetChoice v. Griffin (Arkansas social media law): https://reason.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/GRIFFIN-NETCHOICE-GRANTED.pdf
Preliminary injunction in Free Speech Coalition v. Colmenero (TX porn law): https://reason.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/gov.uscourts.txwd_.1172751222.36.0-1.pdf
Politico: A Simple Law Is Doing the Impossible. It’s Making the Online Porn Industry Retreat: https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2023/08/08/age-law-online-porn-00110148
Aella: Women prefer more violent porn - https://aella.substack.com/p/women-prefer-more-violent-porn-and
U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee: U.S. Marriage rate 1900-2018 - https://www.jec.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/republicans/2020/4/marriage-rate-blog-test
SimilarWeb: PornHub monthly traffic and rankings: https://www.similarweb.com/website/pornhub.com/#overview
Skeptic: How Porn is Messing with Your Manhood: https://www.skeptic.com/reading_room/how-porn-is-messing-with-your-manhood/
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Don’t prosecute Hunter Biden for guns and drugs
We don’t lose other Constitutional rights for using illicit substances, so why is the Second Amendment an exception? Don't prosecute Hunter Biden, and others, for possessing guns and drugs.
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Yascha Mounk on defeating identity politics
How to battle identity politics and defend liberal values of universalism, free speech, and open inquiry
reason.com/video
________
My guest today is Johns Hopkins professor Yascha Mounk, the founder of the online magazine Persuasion and the author of the important new book The Identity Trap: A Story of Ideas and Power in Our Time.
The Identity Trap explains how identity politics and social justice discourse have come to dominate contemporary discussions of just about everything, analyzes their negative influence on society, and shows how to confront and defeat them in the name of liberal values of free expression and open inquiry.
Yascha was a prime mover behind the 2020 open letter on "justice and open debate" in Harper's magazine and is one of the most powerful defenders of free speech and the marketplace of ideas at work today.
This interview took place at the Reason Speakeasy, a live, unscripted monthly conversation held in New York City with outspoken defenders of free speech and heterodox thinking. Go here for information about upcoming events.
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Is Amazon a monopoly?
The FTC says Amazon Prime’s subscription fee makes customers feel like they’re not getting their money’s worth, but that doesn’t make it a monopoly.
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D.C.'s food truck underworld
Despite their popularity, food trucks at the National Mall are paying a hefty price to operate.
https://reason.com/video/2023/10/04/d-c-s-food-truck-underworld/
_______________
Every year, over 25 million tourists flock to the iconic National Mall in Washington, D.C. Yet as they explore some of the nation's greatest museums and monuments, visitors often find themselves faced with limited dining options, which boil down to either pricey cafes at the Smithsonian museums or food trucks parked along the Mall.
The food trucks have, unsurprisingly, become a favorite among tourists. "The diversity is incredible. The food is so well cooked. You could see they really poured their hearts into it. The prices are extraordinary. You can't beat it," Jason, a visitor from Massachusetts who bought a gyro from a food truck nearby, tells Reason.
Yet to serve the hungry tourists at the Mall, D.C.'s food trucks have to pay a hefty price, since their operation is technically illegal. To serve their customers and make a living, food truck operators often have to park in illegal spots along the Mall, or stay parked in legal spots after their meters have expired. They are often fined up to $300 a day by the D.C. parking police.
Food truck operators also face fierce competition for coveted parking spots. Vendors like Maged Naeem, who runs Chicken Friendly just outside the National Museum of American History, resort to parking dummy cars overnight to keep their prized spots, ultimately leading to more parking tickets.
Meanwhile, the fines rack up. In 2022 alone, the city collected $467,000 in parking tickets along the Mall.
This wasn't a problem until the COVID-19 pandemic. Before lockdown restrictions and work-from-home policies, the food truck business was booming in other parts of the district, particularly with the lunch crowd.
"That wasn't only just good for the food truck owners, although it was great for them. It was good for the city as a whole. Right? Get more options for customers, tastier options, more awareness of different cultures and their cuisines, better choices for tourists. It was wonderful for everyone," explained attorney Justin Pearson, who directs the National Street Vending Initiative at the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm.
The pandemic destroyed much of the food truck scene in the district. While trucks can still legally operate in other areas of D.C., foot traffic has dropped significantly, driving many food truck owners to close shop, Pearson added.
"The pandemic obviously closed all of the office buildings. That lunchtime business went away overnight virtually," Doug Povich, owner of the Red Hook Lobster Pound food truck, which went out of business in 2020, tells Reason. "Trucks then had to find other places to vend."
Now, the only spot in D.C. that continues to have reliable lunchtime foot traffic is the National Mall. The challenge for the food trucks, however, arises from the division of authority in the area: The roads where the food trucks park fall under the jurisdiction of the district, while the sidewalks where the transactions take place are overseen by the National Park Service. The D.C. government therefore lacks jurisdiction to create legal parking spots for the trucks along the sidewalk.
Neither the National Parks Service nor the district is willing to assume enforcement responsibilities, meaning the trucks technically remain illegally parked.
"There's inter-bureaucracy apathy, I guess. Nobody wants to be in charge of actually taking care of the trucks down there," Patrick Rathbone, owner of the Big Cheese Truck, tells Reason.
Until the district and the National Parks Service come to an agreement on operating permits, food truck operators will remain stuck in the middle, continuing to pay large fines as they serve the hungry lunch crowds at D.C.'s National Mall.
Produced by Justin Zuckerman; Audio Production by Ian Keyser; Editorial Support by Katarina Hall
Music: "Prelude Carmen" by Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra via Artlist; "Life's Journey Begins" by idokay via Artlist; "Thoughts" by ANBR via Artlist; "Cherubinos Aria Voi che sapete" by Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra via Artlist; "Little Things" by ANBR via Artlist
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How green energy hurts poor countries
Most countries only get rich when they have lots of power, says Bjorn Lomborg, and typically right now that’s fossil fuel.
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Would a federal shutdown affect Ukraine?
Pentagon officials plan to keep spending on Ukraine even if there's a government shutdown. Reason's Nick Gillespie says that's "an amazing admission by the deep state."
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Trump got Sweden’s anti-lockdown strategy wrong
In 2020, then-President Donald Trump dismissed Sweden's anti-lockdown approach to COVID when he tweeted "Despite reports to the contrary, Sweden is paying heavily for its decision not to lockdown." The Cato Institute's Johan Norberg reacts.
Watch the full replay of Norberg's conversation with Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe: youtube.com/watch?v=wC5AG7JDUfY
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Sweden never locked down. Here’s what happened.
"Sweden is the outlier," says Johan Norberg, senior fellow at the Cato Institute.
Watch the full replay of Norberg's conversation with Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe: youtube.com/watch?v=wC5AG7JDUfY
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Is Sweden a socialist success?
If socialists want to imitate Sweden, they need to reform Social Security, privatize product markets, abolish occupational licensing, reduce corporate taxes, abolish property taxes, and implement a national school voucher system.
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Debunking the myth of Scandinavian socialism
"We have been socialists in Sweden and we have been successful, but never at the same time," says Swedish historian Johan Norberg.
Watch the full replay of Norberg's conversation with Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe: youtube.com/watch?v=wC5AG7JDUfY
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Bernie Sanders is wrong about Swedish socialism
Johan Norberg says Bernie Sanders’ socialism is a pipe dream and shares lessons Sweden learned trying to implement it.
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The government intentionally poisoned citizens
The U.S. government intentionally poisoned Americans during prohibition and is estimated to have killed more than 10,000 people.
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The truth about Sweden's COVID policy
The Swedish government's decision to forgo lockdowns as most of Europe, Asia, and North America's political leaders forcibly closed businesses and schools in the early days of the pandemic became one of the most controversial COVID policies of 2020.
The New York Times in April 2020 designated Sweden "the world's cautionary tale," and President Donald Trump proclaimed that "Sweden is paying heavily for its decision not to lockdown" as an early wave of COVID deaths hit Sweden harder than its Nordic neighbors.
But to Swedish officials, "it looked like it was other countries that were engaging in a dangerous experiment," writes Cato Institute senior fellow Johan Norberg in a policy paper entitled "Sweden during the pandemic: Pariah or paragon?"
The attacks on Sweden's laissez-faire approach were short-sighted, says Norberg. Today, Sweden's COVID-19 death rate is not an outlier, and its excess death rate from 2020 to the present is the lowest in Europe.
In a retrospective report on the country's pandemic response, Sweden's public health officials say that they should have more aggressively protected senior citizens and tested and quarantined travelers from COVID hotspots in those early days, but consider the focus on public health recommendations that people can "follow voluntarily" over coercive lockdowns was "fundamentally correct."
Norberg also points out that Sweden avoided the economic contraction that its neighboring countries suffered, as well as the learning loss experienced in countries that closed schools for months or even years.
JoinReason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe for an in-depth discussion with Norberg about the lessons to draw from Sweden's pandemic policies this Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern on Reason's YouTube channel or on Facebook.
Sources referenced in this conversation:
Johan Norberg: Sweden during the pandemic
https://www.cato.org/policy-analysis/sweden-during-pandemic
Trump: Sweden is “paying heavily” for not locking down - April 30, 2020
https://x.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1255825648448348161
NYT: Sweden has become the world’s cautionary tale -
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/07/business/sweden-economy-coronavirus.html
Sweden’s Corona Commission: https://coronakommissionen.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/summary_20220225.pdf
Imperial College report on COVID-19 mitigation: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/medicine/mrc-gida/2020-03-26-COVID19-Report-12.pdf
Trump on Sweden, White House Coronavirus Task Force briefing, April 7, 2020: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpaaOXZbKXY
Bernie Sanders: U.S. should look more like Scandanavia, May 3, 2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cz0u2FH5Bnk
Anders Tegnell talks on herd immunity on BBC HARDtalk, May 19, 2020: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Biqq34aUJcQ
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Rescheduling vs. Descheduling cannabis
Rescheduling cannabis means it’s still federally illegal, but if politicians really want to end the drug war, deschedule the plant entirely.
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How Florida beat California to high speed rail
Brightline is betting that it can run a commercially viable passenger rail service without massive federal subsidies.
Full text and links: https://reason.com/video/2023/09/20/how-florida-beat-california-to-high-speed-rail/
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In 19th century America, trains symbolized modernity. Passenger rail connected the east and west coasts and helped settle the frontier. By 1916, rail accounted for 98 percent of intercity travel.
As it became easier to drive or fly, passenger rail use plummeted. In 1971, the government created Amtrak, which survives on federal subsidies. And most recently the Biden administration gave Amtrak $66 billion in federal subsidies as part of the federal infrastructure bill.
But in Florida, Brightline is showing that it's still possible to run a viable, privately operated passenger rail line under certain conditions. The company is starting service from Miami to Orlando on September 22.
Not only is Brightline the first privately funded intercity rail line in the U.S., but it's also the fastest train in the country outside of the northeast corridor. Topping out at 125 mph in Florida, it will travel from Miami to Orlando in about three hours. For comparison, the Amtrak in the area takes about six and a half hours to complete that same trip.
Mike Reininger, CEO of Brightline, toldReason that passenger rail makes commercial sense under specific conditions, such as the case in Florida, where it connects two populous, tourist-friendly cities that are about 250 miles apart. At that distance, Reininger says, "It is too far to drive and too short to fly. You can approximate the time of flying significantly, improve the time of driving, and you can offer it at a price point that makes it an economic proposition."
There has been one other ambitious effort to build high-speed rail in the U.S.—in California. But that project turned into something so "foolish" that it's "almost a crime," according to Quentin L. Kopp, the former state senator who was crucial in rallying support for a $10 billion bond measure to build high-speed rail in California. He became a fierce opponent of the project when it ran out of money and the agency in charge, he says, broke its promises to voters.
The 520-mile railway between San Francisco and Los Angeles was supposed to be completed by 2020. But after fifteen years of construction, they've only laid track for a 170-mile stretch in the Central Valley. The project, which has received more than $20 billion in state and federal subsidies, is now projected to cost over $128 billion.
Following on its success in Florida, Brightline is also starting to develop a high-speed rail line out west—connecting Las Vegas to Los Angeles. The 218-mile line will have just a handful of stops and plans to reach speeds over 186 mph. But the company is pursuing about $3 billion worth in federal subsidies to complete the project, or about a third of the total estimated cost. Though not even close to the amount of money California needs to finish its project, Robert Poole, the director of transportation policy at Reason Foundation, is "skeptical" once federal money gets involved at all in large infrastructure projects.
"It becomes far less of a business venture. And much more of this attitude that we can do grand things because we don't have to worry about what it costs," says Poole.
But Brightline's Florida project remains a true test of whether there are narrow cases in which American travelers value passenger rail enough to pay for it with their own money.
Photo Credits: akg-images / Paul Almasy/Newscom; Chris Kleponis - CNP/Newscom; Ron Sachs - CNP/Newscom; DPST/Newscom; Everett Collection/Newscom; Everett Collection/Newscom; Everett Collection/Newscom; National Motor Museum / Heritage Images/Newscom; Gary Reyes/TNS/Newscom; Gary Reyes/TNS/Newscom; Gary Reyes/TNS/Newscom; Underwood Archives/Universal Images Group/Newscom; Underwood Archives/Universal Images Group/Newscom; Underwood Archives/UIG / Universal Images Group/Newscom; Darryl Heikes/UPI/Newscom
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Evidence of Joe Biden’s corruption?
Hunter Biden’s real business was leveraging his relationship with his dad.
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Fired for opposing vax mandate: UC professor speaks out
"I sacrificed my career in academic medicine to challenge the University of California's vaccine mandate policy," says psychiatrist Aaron Kheriaty.
Watch the full replay of Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe's conversation with Kheriaty: youtube.com/watch?v=L64oVef6FnU&
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Reacting to Gavin Newsom's COVID revisionism
"I think we would have done everything differently," California Gov. Gavin Newsom said during a recent interview. But critics say the evidence was clear at the time that California's policies were harmful.
Watch the full replay of Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe's conversation with Aaron Kheriaty, a vocal Newsom critic and author of "The New Abnormal: The Rise of the Biomedical Security State": youtube.com/watch?v=L64oVef6FnU&
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Are vaccine mandates ever justified?
"I don't think we want to live in a society where anyone has the right to force another person to inject something," says Aaron Kheriaty, a psychiatrist who was fired for defying the University of California's vaccine mandate.
Watch the full replay of Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe's conversation with Kheriaty: youtube.com/watch?v=L64oVef6FnU&
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The secret history of psychedelics
Historian Erika Dyck wants to document the deep roots of and battles over LSD, psilocybin, and other psychoactive substances.
https://reason.com/video/2023/09/13/the-secret-history-of-psychedelics/
__________
Erika Dyck is a professor at the University of Saskatchewan who studies the history of psychedelics with a special interest in the legacy of Humphry Osmond, the British-born psychiatrist who coined the term pyschedelic, gave Aldous Huxley his first dose of mescaline, and conducted pathbreaking work using LSD to help alcoholics stop drinking. Among Osmond's best-known patients was Bill W., the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Reason sat down with Dyck at the MAPS Psychedelic Science 2023 conference held in Denver this June, where a reported 13,000 people gathered to talk about all aspects of today's psychedelic renaissance. We talked about why drugs such as MDMA, psilocybin, and LSD are making a comeback; how tensions are rising between indigenous people and medical practitioners; and whether prohibitionists have finally lost the war on drugs.
Music: "Life's Journey Begins" by idokay via Artlist
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Did Trump conspire to overturn the election?
"This is a fraud on the American public," then-President Donald Trump said following the 2020 election. Was that speech part of a criminal conspiracy? George Mason University legal scholar Ilya Somin reacts.
Watch the full replay of Somin's live conversation with Reason's Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe: youtube.com/watch?v=Q9tCHrG-87k
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