Ta-Nehisi Coates on Israel: ‘I Felt Lied To’
The journalist discusses his experience visiting Israel and the West Bank.
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The journalist discusses his experience visiting Israel and the West Bank.
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The state’s changing electorate and America’s polarized politics have turned Montana’s Senate race into the most consequential of the year.
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How do you cope when an abusive family member becomes terminally ill?
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He and his acolytes purged the G.O.P. to make it smaller and more strident.
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Ann Patchett: I Signed Up for Email in 1995. I Still Regret It.
What was email but the chance for more friends, more love, more work?
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America Needs More Children. JD Vance’s Shame Game Won’t Get Us There.
David French argues the solution is simpler than we think.
By David French and
The Defendants in France’s Rape Trial Are Telling Us Something Horrifying
The past few weeks have been a brutal reminder that ignorance or the claiming of it can be a convenient tool of the powerful.
By
The Divisions Roiling Beneath the Democratic Party’s Joyful Exterior
Three columnists explore what Kamala Harris’s appeal to conservatives means for the left.
By Lydia PolgreenJamelle Bouie and
The Surprising Power of Sheriffs
As chief law enforcement officers, sheriffs shape how laws around immigration, guns, health and much else play out at the local level.
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Pamela Paul and Carlos Lozada dig into the former first lady’s “book-adjacent object.”
By Carlos Lozada, Pamela Paul and Derek Arthur
The state’s changing electorate and America’s polarized politics have turned Montana’s Senate race into the most consequential of the year.
By Michelle Cottle
When presidents try to influence the central bank, they tend to push for lower interest rates — and that’s the problem.
By Donald L. Kohn
As chief law enforcement officers, sheriffs shape how laws around immigration, guns, health and much else play out at the local level.
By Maurice Chammah
What was email but the chance for more friends, more love, more work?
By Ann Patchett
How do you cope when an abusive family member becomes terminally ill?
By Frøydis Fossli Moe
How do you cope when an abusive family member becomes terminally ill?
By Frøydis Fossli Moe
The past few weeks have been a brutal reminder that ignorance or the claiming of it can be a convenient tool of the powerful.
By Valentine Faure
His grim vision of America seems stuck in the past.
By Paul Krugman
He and his acolytes purged the G.O.P. to make it smaller and more strident.
By Michelle Goldberg
Readers discuss a guest essay about ChatGPT’s bedside manner. Also: Breast cancer screenings; Walz’s missteps; supporting the mental health of schoolchildren.
The artificial intelligence start-up behind ChatGPT needs a legal structure that ensures its commitments can be enforced.
By Andrew Kassoy
It’s been a long year. That won’t stop it from being a very long 22 days.
By Gail Collins and Bret Stephens
I wish you could see what happens to the magnificent colors of berry and bird and flower in the slanting autumn light.
By Margaret Renkl
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David French argues the solution is simpler than we think.
By David French and Sophia Alvarez Boyd
The PRESS Act has unanimous support in the House, but a few senators are blocking it.
By The Editorial Board
The success of the polio vaccination campaign in Gaza shouldn’t obfuscate the threat of other diseases.
By Mohammed Aghaalkurdi
Food is the springboard to talk about a host of issues, including climate, economic justice, public health and labor.
By Mark Bittman
As a Latina, I was taught that my purpose was to produce. But I needed a break.
By Jean Guerrero
Trump remains well outside a bipartisan consensus on competing with China.
By Rush Doshi
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