You May Miss Wokeness
“Wokeness” has few defenders left. That doesn’t mean there’s nothing to defend.
“Wokeness” has few defenders left. That doesn’t mean there’s nothing to defend.
Eleven years ago, the podcast host Stephen West was stocking groceries.
The Democratic National Convention’s first night had a delicate mission: to honor the sitting president before quickly switching gears to celebrate Kamala Harris.
The Harris campaign seems to have grasped an important reality.
Eliminating the long-standing policy would be one of the most viable ways for a president to expand abortion access.
How a now-obscure financier turned the Bahamas into a tax haven—and created a cornerstone of global plutocracy
The ex-president could yet win. And even if he doesn’t, Congress must patch up the legal loopholes he exploited.
Democrats have managed to make detailed policy ideas into one of Trump’s greatest liabilities.
Colleges still don’t have a plan.
But does she want it?
A provocative 1970s novel reads like a contemporary cry for freedom from the expectations of others.
Spencer Cox built his brand on standing against polarization and extremism. Now he’s backing Donald Trump.
The former president doesn’t appear to understand the real meaning of the decorations he once bestowed.
Suburban Utah has become ground zero for deer conservation.
Meet the new Trump, same as the old Trump.
Democrats should say the word liberal.
Culture and entertainment musts from David Frum
The exiled Afghans of Amu TV are holding the Taliban to account—from 7,000 miles away.
Published in The Atlantic in 1998
Acknowledging that kids’ education is good for parents is not a knock against teachers.