
The Pro-Family Policy This Nation Actually Needs
If the Trump administration wants more babies, it needs to embrace a different kind of parent.
If the Trump administration wants more babies, it needs to embrace a different kind of parent.
Why would the World Health Organization want to call “old age” a disease?
When people at the department embrace Trump’s scorn for the law, the law, as a practical limitation on government action, ceases to exist.
The guest host Quinta Brunson was the perfect fit to introduce “Forever 31.”
At the end of the 19th century, an estimated 100,000 people joined the Klondike Gold Rush, seeking their fortunes in the interior of Alaska and Canada’s Yukon territory. Many gold seekers who chose the arduous path inland from Alaska’s port of Valdez also discovered rich copper deposits along the way. The U.S. Army soon started work on the Valdez Trail, which would become the main route between the mining fields and Valdez. Several competing businesses rushed to build a railroad along the route. In 1902, one of those groups sent a team of photographers, the Miles Brothers, to document the town, the growing trail, the landscape, its newly arrived residents, and Alaska Natives. Prints of these photographs were collected into an album I was able to digitize recently at the U.S. National Archives, giving us a remarkable glimpse into daily life along a rough trail into the Alaskan interior, nearly 125 years ago.
The most persuasive “people” on a popular subreddit turned out to be a front for a secret AI experiment.
The meritocracy isn’t working. We need something new.
A century-old book foresaw Trump’s most basic strategy.
Here’s the answer to that—and what we can do about it.
It’s not just a phase.
Families are shrinking. But the weirdest family role is a vital one.
Fact-checking is out, “Community Notes” are in.
He used the constitution to shatter the constitution.
Sometimes, the best thing a parent can do is nothing at all.
What illness taught me about true friendship
When I joined the conservative movement in the 1980s, there were two types of people: those who cared earnestly about ideas, and those who wanted only to shock the left. The reactionary fringe has won.
Amanda Hess’s new book examines a surplus of experts and gadgets that promise to perfect the experience of raising children.
The ex-congressman whose name became a punch line is running for New York’s city council. In some ways, he hasn’t changed a bit.
The Russian president is enacting one of the world’s most extreme natalism programs—and one of the weirdest.
If you can recognize their signature move, then forewarned is forearmed.