For this week’s Honestly, we’re sharing a favorite episode from a favorite podcast, one you may not have heard of: UnHerd with Freddie Sayers. UnHerd’s mission is similar to ours: to push back against the herd mentality, and to provide a platform for otherwise u … | Continue reading
DEI is is alive and well at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s College of Engineering | Continue reading
The conviction of Jennifer Crumbley. Plus: Shane Gillis gets uncanceled, more DEI overreach in academia, and new Free Press merch. | Continue reading
The conviction of Jennifer Crumbley could serve—at long last—as a deterrent to the school shooting epidemic in America, argues Joe Nocera. | Continue reading
Radical and ill-defined ideas on race are undermining medical education, writes former Harvard Medical School dean Jeffrey Flier. | Continue reading
Do voters trust Biden on. . . anything? Why are Democrats so mean to Dean Phillips? And what will Chris Christie do next? An update from the campaign trail. | Continue reading
A pocket of hope in Appalachia. Plus: Stumbling toward the White House, The Free Press in Israel, and two Zoomers duke it out over the Apple Vision Pro. | Continue reading
After the collapse of coal mining and the rise of the opioid epidemic, Hazard, Kentucky, seemed finished. Then locals started to rescue it. | Continue reading
A British minister is forced out of parliament by Islamist threats. Plus: King Charles, woke kindergarten, and a pitch-perfect Grammys. | Continue reading
Mike Freer—a gay, conservative justice minister—is leaving Parliament because of threats to his life. He speaks to The Free Press. | Continue reading
For six years I worked at a hospital that said all teenagers with gender dysphoria must be affirmed. I quit my job to blow the whistle. | Continue reading
In a single poem, Seamus Heaney pays tribute to his late, great friend—and the poets who preceded them both. | Continue reading
Palmer Luckey, Katherine Boyle, and Joe Lonsdale on the defense tech they’re building to keep our country safe—and the threats that keep them up at night. | Continue reading
Plus: In praise of Joni Mitchell, why authenticity is in, justice for Lana Del Rey, and more. | Continue reading
The first lady of folk has never won an important award from the Recording Academy. So why is she even turning up for tomorrow’s show? | Continue reading
Three Squad scandals. A Disney trigger warning. The GOP turns on Tay-Tay. Heterosexuals should probably give up on sex. Plus, Biden’s hard hat, Pelosi’s faux pas, and more. | Continue reading
There’s increasing concern that as scary as this period feels—between Russia’s two-year war in Ukraine and Hamas’s ongoing war with Israel—that all of this will come to be seen as the calm before the storm. Should China decide to move against Taiwan … | Continue reading
Plus: Biden our time with Iran, the new proletariat, the great Kelce-Swift stupidification, and more. | Continue reading
The woman who failed to rescue U.S. friends from the Taliban is Biden’s nominee for ambassador to Iraq. | Continue reading
Why the truck and tractor are replacing the picket line—and what that says about our politics. | Continue reading
Soon, Richard Glossip will either be dead—or he will be the man who gets the death penalty overturned in Oklahoma. | Continue reading
Plus: What if the real war in Israel hasn’t yet begun? | Continue reading
American taxpayers have been subsidizing educators who call for the murder of Jews. Suspending these funds isn’t enough. UNRWA must be abolished for good. | Continue reading
Take the current war with Hamas and multiply it by ten. That’s what war with Hezbollah would look like. And Israelis are not asking if it will begin, but when. | Continue reading
Anna Akhmatova wrote of her people’s darkest days, when they were caught in the middle of the twentieth century’s vise. | Continue reading
Christopher Rufo and Yascha Mounk debate. | Continue reading
Today, Yascha Mounk and Christopher Rufo debate the origins of DEI and the right way to fight the illiberal orthodoxy that has consumed our schools and institutions. Christopher is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a board member at New College of Florida, and maybe the … | Continue reading
Democratic Socialists of America has a budget crisis. Hamas thanks U.S. college kids. Trump keeps soaring. Oakland’s In-N-Out shuts down. Plus, the white supremacists of Taizz. | Continue reading
Ahead of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, Yad Vashem chairman Dani Dayan talks to The Free Press about the importance of bearing witness. | Continue reading
Plus: U.S. troops know we’re already at war with Iran. And a deeper dive on high school library censorship. | Continue reading
Amin Husain added that New York is a ‘Zionist city,’ and bragged about violence against Israel at an event at The New School last month. | Continue reading
Iranian proxies have carried out dozens of attacks on U.S. troops since October 7. Two Navy SEALs are dead. ‘We are funding our enemy and sending our service members to be their victims.’ | Continue reading
A judge has ruled that Justin Trudeau’s trucker crackdown was illegal. Rupa Subramanya talks to the protesters his government targeted. | Continue reading
The question is why? Plus: More from the campaign trail, justice for Canada’s truckers—and Barbie! | Continue reading
Are voters craving an authoritarian who will overthrow our democracy—or is there something else going on? Martin Gurri explains. | Continue reading
The city is greeting new arrivals with resources like health screenings and rent support. ‘They’re giving migrants all the things we’ve been asking for since we came here in chains.’ | Continue reading
The former governor could beat Biden. But Trump is ahead in New Hampshire by double digits. Can Haley pull off a miracle tomorrow? We asked her on the campaign trail. | Continue reading
Hughes said nothing of his wife’s suicide for decades, until his own final years when he penned the words: ‘Everything in me loved her.’ | Continue reading
Darby Hart is brilliant, young, bisexual, and beautiful. But she’s no feminist hero, writes Kat Rosenfield. | Continue reading
Trump sweeps Iowa. Americans riot over a cup. Milei is the talk of Davos. Plus: A lost city, flying cars, and much more. | Continue reading
We investigate. Plus: Jason Kelce vs. Travis Kelce, veep-stakes, and more. | Continue reading
The left claims that progressive books are being censored in public schools. But my research proves the opposite is true. | Continue reading
It’s been four years since the first American death from the coronavirus. Four years since we were told that wearing masks—even cloth masks—were essential to keeping us safe. The same goes for lockdowns and social distancing. Any inconvenience to society was out … | Continue reading
DEI in retreat. A captured imam is freed. An anti-Israel map is taken down. Plus, Carole Hooven on leaving Harvard, a hostage speaks, and more. | Continue reading
After I stated banal facts about human biology, I found myself caught in a DEI web, without the support to do the job I loved. The only way out was to leave it. | Continue reading
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion offices are still deeply entrenched at our institutions—but the retrenchment is well under way. | Continue reading
Seventeen-year-old Agam Goldstein-Almog saw Hamas murder her father and sister before her eyes. Then she was taken to Gaza. | Continue reading
Coleman Hughes on some inconvenient reporting that suggests Derek Chauvin is not a murderer, but a scapegoat. | Continue reading