Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Reason

Japan's Smoking Bans Make a Lot More Sense Than America's

Japan's Smoking Bans Make a Lot More Sense Than America's
ShareXFacebook

Owners of small restaurants and bars can decide whether to allow smoking, and customers can choose for themselves whether to patronize them.

R

Source

Reason

Read full article at Reason

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Politics Stories

Black lawmakers tank SCORE Act with calls for boycotts
The Hill

Black lawmakers tank SCORE Act with calls for boycotts

The SCORE Act, a controversial piece of legislation that aimed to curb the big business of college sports, has been torpedoed by a coalition of Black lawmakers who argued it would harm minority athletes and benefit only top-level universities, coaches and programs. Members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), some of whom had previously voiced support for the proposal, in an unexpected reversal last week announced none...

Read more →
Why we need a Memorial Day for civilian victims of war
Vox

Why we need a Memorial Day for civilian victims of war

Headstones and American flags are seen at the Arlington National Cemetery during the Memorial Day, which is held annually to honor those who died while serving in the armed forces. | Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images The first observance of what came to be known as Memorial Day was on May 30, 1868, when a Civil War general called on Americans to commemorate the sacrifices of Union soldiers. It was initially called Decoration Day, for the practice of decorating graves with wreaths and

Read more →
The flawed policies driving Medicare waste — and how to fix them
Washington Examiner

The flawed policies driving Medicare waste — and how to fix them

Medicare hemorrhages about $60 billion a year in waste, fraud, and abuse — money lost from a program serving 69 million Americans. Fraud reflects deliberate deception, but much of Medicare’s waste stems from flawed policy and perverse incentives. The Trump administration is on the warpath, taking unprecedented administrative steps to curb this abuse of taxpayers’ […]

Read more →
We were there on 9/11. This Memorial Day, we can’t let America forget
Washington Examiner

We were there on 9/11. This Memorial Day, we can’t let America forget

We come from different parties and have walked different paths, but we share something few Americans do: we have held the weight of this country’s security in our hands.  On Sept. 11, 2001, parties and titles didn’t matter. We were Americans, and that was enough. We have stood at the intersection of crisis and consequence. […]

Read more →
Advertisement