Sometimes, Consensus Can Be Ruinous
The Iraq War revealed the downside of cooperation and national unity.
The Iraq War revealed the downside of cooperation and national unity.
The problem with dwelling on news about things you can’t control
Authoritarian competence might seem appealing for a time. But the costs are too high.
When differences of opinion become existential, citizens—in the U.S. and around the world—must find a way to manage them.
Shiite clerics in earlier centuries could never have imagined so intrusive a system.
The “national conservatives” know what they dislike, but not what to do about it.
America’s supposed allies feel entitled to humiliate the president.
Refusing to admit the gravity of the problem won’t make it go away.
Being good is hard if you live under an authoritarian regime.
Blaming U.S. hegemony for global problems has been easy, but Putin’s invasion of Ukraine offers a preview of a much more dangerous world.