
Trump Has Already Botched His Own Bad Tariff Plan
Once you’ve said you might negotiate, nobody is going to believe you when you change your mind and say you’ll never negotiate.
Once you’ve said you might negotiate, nobody is going to believe you when you change your mind and say you’ll never negotiate.
The policy is absurd. It’s also an extension of Trump’s chaotic personality.
The administration claims to be protecting Jews while advancing an agenda that most Jews oppose.
A unified movement like “Buy Canadian” is hard to find in America.
Canada’s ultimate retaliation for Trump’s tariffs will be to turn ordinary Americans who cross the border to shop for cheaper goods into latter-day bootleggers.
Instead of leading to reduced trade barriers, the new global tariff plan is all but guaranteed to raise them.
François Chollet has constructed the ultimate test for the bots.
The health secretary’s clearest plans for psychiatric treatment are a retreat to the past.
Authoritarian leaders are most dangerous when they’re popular. Wrecking the economy is unlikely to broaden Trump’s support.
The nearly 375-year-old religion’s principles line up surprisingly well with modern parenting research.
The collapse of Antarctica’s ice sheets would be disastrous. A group of scientists has an idea to save them.
They can’t stop talking about their problems.
The public has not responded kindly to other politicians who have tried this in the past.
Leonard Peikoff dedicated his life to promoting the author’s vision of freedom and self-determination. But at what cost?
MAGA conservatives love Viktor Orbán. But he’s left his country corrupt, stagnant, and impoverished.
The chaos inside the White House national-security team persists.
U.S. national-security leaders included me in a group chat about upcoming military strikes in Yemen. I didn’t think it could be real. Then the bombs started falling.
Influential novelists are imagining what women’s lives might look like without the demands of partners and children.
How Doug Ford became Ontario’s chief enforcer
The world still needs Ringo Starr.