The Backlash to the GOP’s Union-Bashing Has Begun in Earnest
Has the Republican Party’s grand experiment in union-busting finally come to an end? Scott Walker, the Republican governor of Wisconsin, rose to national prominence in 2011 when he passed a landmark...
View ArticleCelebrating Independence Day With Poland’s Far Right
Early on Sunday morning, dozens of buses set off from every region of Poland, carrying tens of thousands of patriotic Poles to the capital for the centenary celebration of the country’s independence...
View ArticleA New, Wickedly Playful Voice in Crime Fiction
Korede, the narrator of My Sister, The Serial Killer, the debut novel by Oyinkan Braithwaite, is a nurse at a hospital in Lagos, the city where she lives with her mother and her sister, Ayoola. The...
View ArticleWill Trump Check His Executive Privilege?
While pundits debate whether there was a blue wave in last week’s midterm elections—there was—the White House is bracing for an onslaught from the new Democratic majority in the House of...
View ArticleDon’t Blow This, Democrats
Nancy Pelosi made herself more than clear. For over a year, the Democratic leader of the House of Representatives wanted nothing to do with the growing interest in impeaching President Donald Trump....
View ArticleGrand Old Paranoia
In the months before the midterms, the GOP began sounding the alarm that the Democrats, should they take back the House, were planning a slew of investigations into nearly every aspect of the Trump...
View ArticleChess Is Back
Tuesday, in central London, as Theresa May unveiled a freshly forged Brexit deal, American Fabiano Caruana and Norwegian Magnus Carlsen played out a procedural draw in game four of their World Chess...
View ArticleFacebook Betrayed America
Seven months ago, Mark Zuckerberg sat before Congress and said he was sorry about the fake news and the data breaches—and that it wasn’t really Facebook’s fault. The company’s founder and CEO had been...
View ArticleThe Struggle to Save Our Schools
In Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court identified America’s system of public education as “the very foundation of good citizenship.” An educated public is critical to a system that relies on...
View ArticleCalifornia’s Wildfires Don’t Have to Be So Deadly
Rescue teams are still searching through burned rubble for bodies after a massive wildfire devastated Butte County, California, last week. About 100 people are still missing. But already the Camp Fire,...
View ArticleUkraine’s Fall From Hope
In Kiev, you can walk up the stairs from the metro onto a square that’s been home to three revolutions in thirty years, and any number of protests large and small. With its memorials, monuments, and a...
View ArticleDoes the Federalist Society Still Need Trump?
The Federalist Society is convening in Washington on Thursday for its annual convention, a Comic-Con of sorts for the conservative legal movement. It’s been a blockbuster year for those in attendance....
View ArticleThe Ballad of Buster Scruggs Is the Coen Brothers’ Odd Paean to the Western
“You can’t help but compare yourself against the old-timers,” says Sheriff Ed Tom Bell in the opening of the Coen brothers’ No Country for Old Men. “Can’t help but wonder how they’d have operated these...
View ArticleClimate Change Could Sink Amazon’s New York Headquarters
When Amazon announced on Tuesday that it would build one of its new headquarters in Long Island City’s Anable Basin, environmentalists were quick to notice that the site could be partially underwater...
View ArticleIs It Racist to Ban Menthol Cigarettes—or Not To?
To stop kids from smoking, Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb wants to stop nicotine from tasting like candy. So he proposed two new restrictions on cigarette and e-cigarette...
View ArticleHow Good Is Your Electronic Trackpad Signature?
What was your signature like at eighteen? Is it still the same? In the wake of the 2018 midterms, the American electoral system is under scrutiny again—as, in fact, it seems to be almost every two...
View ArticleThe Punctured Myth of Sheryl Sandberg
It’s been five years since Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, published her manifesto, Lean In, urging women not to sell themselves short at work or doubt their ability to...
View ArticleThe Chilling Neo-Nazi Trial That Exposed the Dark Side of a New Germany
On June 27, 2001, Ali Taşköprü drove to the market in Hamburg to buy cigarettes. When he returned to his family’s store he noticed a dark liquid on the floor: a pool of blood. Behind the counter lay...
View ArticleRetirement in America? Too Expensive.
Donald Trump has encouraged a vision of Latin America as a land of endless chaos where one can never be too careful. The Sicario movies summarize these fears: Trips to Mexico always take place in...
View ArticleThe Truth Behind the Toothless Rebellion Against Nancy Pelosi
On Monday, 16 conservative Democrats took their shot at Nancy Pelosi, who is expected to easily win the speakership when the 116th Congress convenes in January. It’s an odd, futile rebellion, one that...
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