Hezbollah Got Caught in Its Own Trap
How Nasrallah’s death remade the strategic landscape
How Nasrallah’s death remade the strategic landscape
The evidence is convincing: The betting industry is ruining lives.
In the years I worked for him, Jimmy Carter was always the same: disciplined, funny, enormously intelligent, and deeply spiritual.
Now Israel is fighting the war it planned for—alongside the one it refused to see coming and still hasn’t brought to an end.
His new play, McNeal, starring Robert Downey Jr., subverts the idea that artificial intelligence threatens human ingenuity.
Hint: It’s not just the screens.
Two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal. Thirty-five years of racist housing policy. Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.
How to speak truth without fear—but avoid alienating everyone you know
What was once his winning campaign issue is now a toss-up.
They’re not making me any healthier or happier.
On loving and losing the Oakland A’s
Why we need to face the best arguments from the other side
Ashli Babbitt’s mother and the wife of a notorious January 6 rioter are at the center of a new mythology on the right. They are also my neighbors.
Over the weekend, the former president delivered a series of speeches laced with threats and nearly incomprehensible musings.
In his new book, The Message, Ta-Nehisi Coates sacrifices necessary complexity.
Economists aren’t telling the whole truth about tariffs.
For most, the big decision is about whether to vote at all.
Tuesday’s debate may hinge on whether Tim Walz can exploit his rival’s greatest weakness.