Cities that don’t welcome new residents won’t thrive. | Continue reading
And how it’s caused problems ever since. | Continue reading
Bad policy, bad law, bad politics. | Continue reading
Musk’s plans for Mars do not violate international law. | Continue reading
This is the man Biden has selected to help save the country from a virus that is particularly dangerous to the elderly. | Continue reading
Both have been rebuked in some important respects by the electorate. | Continue reading
If Trump loses this election, there’s going to be a lot more kookery afoot. Kookery isn’t the solution—it’s the problem. | Continue reading
On this special Sunday edition of The Editors, Rich interviews Trafalgar Group CEO Robert Cahaly about polling and what it says about the upcoming election. | Continue reading
The DOJ shouldn’t pursue these actions unless it can convincingly demonstrate harm to consumers. | Continue reading
Let’s be absolutely clear: The censorship we’re witnessing from the Valley is a sign of conservative weakness. | Continue reading
The notion that the quality of Steele’s efforts doesn’t rise to that of a vaccine conspiracy film is risible. | Continue reading
Big Tech will regret suppressing a story that is, by any journalistic standard, newsworthy. | Continue reading
The Biden campaign did not dispute the veracity of the emails. | Continue reading
So far, zero workers have gotten COVID. | Continue reading
Letter tied to recent revelations that The New York Times stealthily edited out the signature claim of the project. | Continue reading
If lockdowns really altered the course of this pandemic, then case counts should have clearly dropped whenever they took place. | Continue reading
As is often the case with wild allegations of institutional misconduct, it is wise to demand proof, but also urgent to insist that the charge be properly looked into. | Continue reading
What Neil Postman got right — and what he failed to predict. | Continue reading
A partnership of government, a nongovernmental organization, and Indian reservations could make it happen. | Continue reading
Professor Greg Patton was giving a lecture about the use of “filler words” in speech during a recent online class. | Continue reading
Police reform should be modeled after the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Increased accountability would benefit the police as much as the communities they serve. | Continue reading
Rogen claimed he was “fed a huge amount of lies about Israel” growing up, and he now questions the legitimacy of the Jewish state’s existence. | Continue reading
Compiled here is a list of some people, monuments, and artistic works that have been the targets of “cancellations.” | Continue reading
This can’t possibly work. Can it? | Continue reading
For peddlers of ideology, free inquiry is a business risk — hence the obsession with stamping out samizdat. | Continue reading
They have decided to legalize racial discrimination. | Continue reading
The tech platform excludes even personal experience that challenges transgender orthodoxy. | Continue reading
A strategic design update is due. | Continue reading
Numbers reveal a lot, but they do not contain the whole truth. | Continue reading
His Section 230 executive order would circumvent the legislative branch — and encourage the chilling of speech. | Continue reading
Once again, further evidence upended the narrative of a viral video — but not before someone’s life and reputation were destroyed. | Continue reading
“We’ve never seen numbers like this, in such a short period of time,” Dr. Mike deBoisblanc said. | Continue reading
Don’t underestimate the sociopolitical consequences of declining fertility. | Continue reading
The study showed that 285 patients who tested positive for the coronavirus despite apparently recovering were unable to spread any infection. | Continue reading
We should make more long-term investments in undirected research in basic science. | Continue reading
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, we may see a wave of Americans moving out of big cities as people flee to the suburbs. | Continue reading
The disease afflicted the author as he was writing what became The Innocents Abroad. | Continue reading
The more effective the efforts have been, the more opposed the critics are to them. | Continue reading
There’s no proof the coronavirus originated in a laboratory, but we can’t take the Chinese government’s denials at face value. | Continue reading
Tom Cotton was both the first and the loudest voice in Congress to sound the alarm about the looming pandemic. | Continue reading
And the irreparable damage they have caused around the globe. | Continue reading
It is a serious disease, and we should treat it like one. But the shutdown approach may be imperfect. | Continue reading
Newark is cracking down on “coronavirus disinformation,” warning that any “false reporting” will lead to criminal prosecution. What gives Newark the authority? | Continue reading
America now faces a more delicate threat than those posed by Chinese manufacturing prowess or digital technologies. | Continue reading
Reviews of Hitler: A Biography, by Peter Longerich, and Hitler: A Global Biography, by Brendan Simms. | Continue reading
A new book explains why it’s really not so bad. | Continue reading
Instead of new development, we got the Google piñata. | Continue reading
The problem with “democratic socialism” is that it is both. | Continue reading