| Here's a simple proposition: Social media companies shouldn't be able to get away with drug dealers using their sites to sell illegal substances. And here's a straightforward solution: Make it so that those companies may be liable for drug-trafficking on their sites by reforming Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. If there is any issue that might prompt lawmakers to crack down on social media platforms, that might just be it. Sure enough, as James Hohmann reports: "There is strong bipartisan appetite for prodding tech companies to intensify efforts to stop drug sales" on their sites. Who knows if even something as fundamental as that could draw something from Congress. In any case, as Hohmann writes, "the problem is too big, and the danger to young people too great, to delay taking action." (Samuel Corum/Getty Images) Snapchat is shielded from any potential liability for kids dying from drugs they bought over the platform because of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. By James Hohmann ● Read more » | | | | The music and fashion mogul is selling his 3,885-acre ranch in Cody, Wyo. He's leaving two years after arriving, having made a mark, but not a big one. By Zac Taylor and Leo Wolfson ● Read more » | | | | Tech policy is the new trade policy, and the Biden administration is taking important steps to compete with China. By David Ignatius ● Read more » | | | | The right now demands that you take account of their feelings, just like liberals. By Paul Waldman ● Read more » | | | The ruling marks a setback to the conservative organization as it prepares to defend itself against a lawsuit. By Erik Wemple ● Read more » | | | | Republican voters have a choice — Trumpist populism or the party's traditional agenda. By Hugh Hewitt ● Read more » | | | | In conversations with my colleagues about this issue, we all say the same thing: "How can smart people doubt climate change? It is happening right outside our back door!" By Bruce M. Beehler ● Read more » | | | While Democrats slept, Republicans created a system of corruption beyond the reach of democratic accountability. By Paul Waldman ● Read more » | | | | The closing arguments the major campaigns are rolling do not fill me with hope about anyone showing grace or humility once the votes are counted. By Norman Leahy ● Read more » | | | | Frances Haugen loves Facebook, she swears. And that makes her story compelling. By Molly Roberts ● Read more » | | | | An federal appeals court judge's dissent makes for exhilarating reading and points the way for a sensible ruling. By George F. Will ● Read more » | | | | For American Catholics, the meeting between Biden and Francis will underscore how out of step many U.S. Catholic leaders are with the pontiff. By E.J. Dionne Jr. ● Read more » | | | | Why did it take news reports to unearth issues that should have been spotted by good oversight? By Colbert I. King ● Read more » | | | The state has gone from leading the country in vaccination rates to leading it in covid case rates. By Anne Zink ● Read more » | | | | A smaller, targeted investment in our most underserved students will pay off. By Thomas Bailey and Thomas Brock ● Read more » | | | |