If the latest Obamacare lawsuit succeeds, Obamacare is in big trouble
The Affordable Care Act is being litigated. Again.
The Affordable Care Act is being litigated. Again.
The American abortion rate hit a three-decade low in 2011 -- and a new wave of abortion restrictions aren't necessarily the reason why.
Today's top five stories: (1) Yellen's first day; (2) what Healthcare.gov still can't do; (3) Republican support for immigration reform is shaky; (4) on Keystone, it's up to Kerry; and (5) another small State of the Union promise fulfilled.
The retail industry wants you to think that everybody can work their way up. Reality is a little less ideal.
The report found that blocking or approving the Keystone XL pipeline was unlikely to have a "significant" impact on climate change emissions.
The Federal Reserve's long good-bye to Ben S. Bernanke is almost over.
Accountable care organizations are saving some money, though what exactly that means is still unclear.
Brazil's answer to poverty is to give poor people money. Is there a lesson for the U.S.?
The Senate just voted to delay reforms to the flood-insurance program after widespread protests.
A 1991 Radio Shack ad shows just how amazing modern smartphones are.
More expensive hospitals tend to have higher prestige and brand-name recognition, but there's no clear evidence that they're actually providing better health care.
How do you say good-bye to the man credited with saving America from the next Great Depression?
There are 618 million Internet users in China. But that's only 45 percent of the total population.
Today's top five stories: (1) economic growth stays strong, for now; (2) a notable triumph for health reform; (3) the Republican perestroika; (4) state of our union still changing; and (5) a big legal challenge to the NSA.
"There are about 4 million songs on Spotify — 20 percent of the app's entire catalogue of music — with zero listens."
Turns out traditional store operators have some utility when it comes to knowing what customers want.
Last year, China added far more fossil-fuel capacity than it did solar, wind, hydro, and nuclear power combined.
Why USA v. Muhtorov is the most important challenge to warrantless wiretapping yet.
Yes, the first question is "What is Ukraine?"
The U.S. currency is still on top, and a new book by a former IMF official explains why that makes sense.