
DOGE Is Bringing Back a Deadly Disease
Cuts to agencies that protect workers’ lungs are going to result in the resurgence of a preventable illness.
Cuts to agencies that protect workers’ lungs are going to result in the resurgence of a preventable illness.
Leo Mazzone was right about the undue focus on pitch velocity.
Ron Chernow’s biography dwells more on the wreck of a man than on his sublimely comic work.
For millions of American low-wage workers today, the problem is not overwork—it’s underwork.
What Netanyahu describes as impending victory is a dive into the morass.
How the “opinionated” chatbots destroyed AI’s potential, and how we can fix it
Dismissing evidence that a politician might be unfit for office is as much a mistake for the right as it was for the left.
Anne Applebaum on America’s backsliding democracy
Food safety in America is under attack.
What an American pope means for the Catholic Church and the world
Jeanine Pirro, Trump’s nominee for U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., is a real prosecutor. She’s also a real MAGA partisan.
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
In the mangroves with Florida’s poet of excess and grift
The sun is setting on burger dominance.
A conversation with the president about executive power, Signalgate, and 24-karat gold
By choosing the name Leo XIV, the pope has indicated that he won’t merely be progressive or conservative.
“Cherish it while you can” is hard advice to follow for many new parents.
In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.
Kirsten Hillman talks Trump, trade, and the fraught future of the U.S.-Canada relationship.
We live in a world of noisy narcissism, but you can escape the cacophony—and be happier.