October 2023


Politics October 2, 2023

Battle cry of the politically listless

We are stuck in this weird purgatory between what America used to be and what it is becoming

Bridget Phetasy

Politics October 2, 2023

The Youngkin blueprint

Can Virginia be a model for Republicans nationwide?

Amber Duke

Science & Tech October 2, 2023

We’re fighting the Covid censors

When there is scientific disagreement or uncertainty, the government must never pretend there is consensus and certainty

Jay Bhattacharya and Martin Kulldorff

Politics October 2, 2023

Why the new right is like the old left

For coming round on war, NAFTA and raw food, conservatives get zero credit

Matthew Walther

Business October 2, 2023

The problem facing US cemeteries

Cemeteries like ours ‘saw their best days prior to 1900,’ says Paul

Teresa Mull

Internet October 2, 2023

Doombragging: the rise of sustainable boasting

The old-fashioned humble-brag looks passé next to the doombrag

Neal Pollack

Politics October 2, 2023

Dobbs needn’t be a Pyrrhic victory for Republicans

Pro-life politicians haven’t gotten their legs under them yet

Ben Domenech

Policy October 2, 2023

What happened to the great West Coast cities?

Never before have all the burgeoning metropolises of the future started to shrink

Joel Kotkin

International October 2, 2023

World events are not going America’s way

We need not doubling down but fundamental change

Elbridge Colby

International October 2, 2023

NATO’s post-Cold War strategy has been a disaster

The alliance is fighting for its life — and dying

Daniel McCarthy

Health October 2, 2023

The lessons of ancient Rome’s dangerous doctors

‘I died of a surfeit of doctors,’ read one Roman funerary inscription. But where did this surfeit come from?

Peter Jones

Internet October 2, 2023

The rise of the lazy-girl job

Gen Zers are quite right to call time on a lifestyle that glamorizes overtime, burnout and the ceaseless rat race

Josie Cox

Business October 2, 2023

How does Michael Klein do it?

He is the Rasputin of Wall Street. Just when you think he’s down and out, he pops back up and puts himself right back in the middle of things

William D. Cohan