
‘I Run the Country and the World’
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
In a new novel, Daniel Kehlmann considers why the director G. W. Pabst worked with the Nazis.
A 300-page report makes for dismal reading.
A new sign that AI is competing with college grads
A drop in maritime traffic suggests that the worst is yet to come.
A conversation with the president about executive power, Signalgate, and 24-karat gold
I don’t know what’s happening, but I’m stocking up on ibuprofen.
The president wants to seize new powers, yet he’s also eager to hand off responsibility for hard decisions.
It started in 1934, with a PR crisis.
The most persuasive “people” on a popular subreddit turned out to be a front for a secret AI experiment.
If the Trump administration wants more babies, it needs to embrace a different kind of parent.
Amanda Hess’s new book examines a surplus of experts and gadgets that promise to perfect the experience of raising children.
The Rehearsal takes the prankster’s quest for self-betterment to new extremes.
Women are expected to be nurturers. Firstborns are expected to be exemplars. Being both is exhausting.
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.”
Why have Republican leaders abandoned their principles in support of an immoral and dangerous president?
The meritocracy isn’t working. We need something new.
In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.
Daughters tend to receive higher levels of affection and patience at home than sons. But the sons might need it more.