Try GOLD - Free
CULTURE WAR POLICE STATE
Reason magazine
|November 2025
HOW THE CULTURE WAR FEEDS THE POLICE STATE

The Hood County constable was in the middle of a nearly two-year investigation of several school librarians for distributing allegedly obscene books. Local news outlet KXAS obtained the body camera footage and the nearly 800-page case file of the officer's investigation last year, which concluded after the district attorney declined to file the charges that the constable had taken the liberty of drafting up.

This phenomenon started in the states, and none have pursued it with more intensity than Florida and Texas, where governors and legislatures have competed to show that they’re fighting the hardest against what they call “woke” excess and leftist hegemony. Now this style of governance—using criminal law, mass surveillance, tip lines, and the threat of police violence to wage the culture war—is going national.
This doesn’t just implicate the freedom of trans people or high schoolers who want to read Toni Morrison; it’s a danger to every American who wants to live, work, and travel without being monitored and menaced by the state.
THE ‘BLUEPRINT STATE’
IF YOU TRACE the origins of President Donald Trump's numerous executive orders this year on any culture war issue, it will often take you to Florida or Texas.
When the second Trump administration issued an order threatening to strip federal funding from K-12 schools that teach children “anti-American, subversive, harmful, and false ideologies” related to gender and race, it was lifting from Florida's playbook.
This story is from the November 2025 edition of Reason magazine.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Reason magazine
Reason magazine
MOVIE: SHIN GODZILLA
When a strange aquatic creature appears in Tokyo Bay, Japanese officials assure the public that there is no reason to worry that it could wreak havoc on shore.
1 min
November 2025

Reason magazine
MOVIE: EDDINGTON
There's never been a movie quite like Eddington.
1 mins
November 2025

Reason magazine
REP. CHIP ROY SOMETIMES DISAGREES WITH HIS 'LIBERTARIAN BROTHERS AND SISTERS'
THE TEXAS CONGRESSMAN ON SPENDING, IMMIGRATION, AND THE AMERICAN DREAM
17 mins
November 2025

Reason magazine
MOVIE: WEAPONS
Weapons, the new horror film from writer-director Zach Cregger, is fascinatingly oblique.
1 min
November 2025

Reason magazine
'Botched' Drug Raids Show How Prohibition Invites Senseless Violence
THE WAR ON DRUGS AUTHORIZES POLICE CONDUCT THAT OTHERWISE WOULD BE READILY RECOGNIZED AS CRIMINAL.
20 mins
November 2025

Reason magazine
Golden Ages Don't Last
BUT THEY CAN TEACH US A LOT ABOUT WHAT MAKES CIVILIZATIONS RISE AND FALL.
11 mins
November 2025

Reason magazine
PRANK: LARRY RICHARDSON
Google Scholar is a wonderful research resource. The free service covers a huge amount of the global scientific publishing enterprise, encompassing peer-reviewed articles, books, reports, conference papers, and preprints. It's easy to use and accessible to anyone.
1 min
November 2025

Reason magazine
How 'National Security' Came Unmoored From Americans' Actual Security
THE IDEA OF “national security” is so ubiquitous that it is hard to imagine an American political culture without it.
5 mins
November 2025

Reason magazine
Trump Is the Coal President
COAL-THE DOMINANT fuel in the U.S., before it was steadily replaced by cheaper and cleaner energy sources—has found new life under President Donald Trump. In April, Trump issued an executive order to reinvigorate “America’s Beautiful Clean Coal Industry,” which directed federal agencies to remove regulatory barriers to coal production and coal mining on federal lands.
2 mins
November 2025
Reason magazine
TV: TOO MUCH
Lena Dunham's new Netflix series Too Much is a meandering, if still highly watchable, rom-com. The show chronicles 30-something Jessica, who relocates to London after a devastating breakup.
1 min
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size