Graydon Carter’s charming memoir captures how the magazine defined print’s last era.

The president is on firm ground ending collective bargaining for many federal jobs.

Mike Miles is proving that traditional methods—not trendy educational fads—can improve academic performance.

In a 7-2 decision last week, the Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulations.

The Left’s splintering violence threatens a veto over democratic power.

From blocking drug screenings for newborns to limiting child-abuse investigations, the New York assemblyman's policies would endanger at-risk kids.

They function as a form of indirect affirmative action.

Silencing an infamous group’s account will make it harder to hold them accountable.

Intended to root out fraud, they now largely benefit well-connected former regulators and opportunistic lawyers.


A New York city council report wrongly implies that involuntary transport rates are evidence of discrimination.

Despite Supreme Court rulings, hundreds of laws still unconstitutionally bar religious groups from public funding.

Voters prefer moderation with a checkered past to progressive governance.

A French court’s banning of the populist candidate from presidential elections for five years may have the opposite effect of its apparent intention.

A federal judge has shut down the corruption case against New York’s mayor, setting up a potential showdown between Adams, Andrew Cuomo, and Zohran Mamdani.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

A policy push for domestic manufacturing risks boondoggles.

Lawsuits against websites based on the ADA are common because lawyers can get a quick monetary settlement if they find any issues.

Mayor Adams’s accountability plan is a good start.

In a 7-2 decision last week, the Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulations.

The Left’s splintering violence threatens a veto over democratic power.

From blocking drug screenings for newborns to limiting child-abuse investigations, the New York assemblyman's policies would endanger at-risk kids.

They function as a form of indirect affirmative action.

Silencing an infamous group’s account will make it harder to hold them accountable.

Intended to root out fraud, they now largely benefit well-connected former regulators and opportunistic lawyers.


A New York city council report wrongly implies that involuntary transport rates are evidence of discrimination.

Despite Supreme Court rulings, hundreds of laws still unconstitutionally bar religious groups from public funding.

Voters prefer moderation with a checkered past to progressive governance.

A French court’s banning of the populist candidate from presidential elections for five years may have the opposite effect of its apparent intention.

A federal judge has shut down the corruption case against New York’s mayor, setting up a potential showdown between Adams, Andrew Cuomo, and Zohran Mamdani.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

A policy push for domestic manufacturing risks boondoggles.

Lawsuits against websites based on the ADA are common because lawyers can get a quick monetary settlement if they find any issues.

Mayor Adams’s accountability plan is a good start.

In a 7-2 decision last week, the Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulations.

The Left’s splintering violence threatens a veto over democratic power.

From blocking drug screenings for newborns to limiting child-abuse investigations, the New York assemblyman's policies would endanger at-risk kids.

They function as a form of indirect affirmative action.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.

An exclusive report on a new center that seeks to empower activists to oppose “anti-trans” laws.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

The RISE UPP initiative appears to be using applicants’ “commitment to diversity” as a proxy for race.

Universities have gone from arguing that science is biased to claiming that even the overhead on their massive federal research budgets must not be cut.

Jennifer Manly has been associated with over $100 million in grants over the past 20 years.

He is believed to have committed suicide after suffering severe complications from gender-transition surgery.

It’s time for the Trump administration to intervene.

An insider tells the story of the intel agency’s ideological capture.

The University of California’s program creates a stifling orthodoxy.

Trump was right to slash education contracts. He should keep going.

Intelligence officials maintained a chatroom to discuss polyamory and transgender surgeries, internal documents reveal.

Fellow-to-faculty programs have seeded academia with activists.

The dean of natural and mathematical sciences emphasized the importance of diversity when looking at job candidates.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.

An exclusive report on a new center that seeks to empower activists to oppose “anti-trans” laws.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

The RISE UPP initiative appears to be using applicants’ “commitment to diversity” as a proxy for race.

Universities have gone from arguing that science is biased to claiming that even the overhead on their massive federal research budgets must not be cut.

Jennifer Manly has been associated with over $100 million in grants over the past 20 years.

He is believed to have committed suicide after suffering severe complications from gender-transition surgery.

It’s time for the Trump administration to intervene.

An insider tells the story of the intel agency’s ideological capture.

The University of California’s program creates a stifling orthodoxy.

Trump was right to slash education contracts. He should keep going.

Intelligence officials maintained a chatroom to discuss polyamory and transgender surgeries, internal documents reveal.

Fellow-to-faculty programs have seeded academia with activists.

The dean of natural and mathematical sciences emphasized the importance of diversity when looking at job candidates.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.

An exclusive report on a new center that seeks to empower activists to oppose “anti-trans” laws.


The Spotlight
After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The assassination of Brian Thompson does not call for a “conversation” about health care—it calls for a reckoning with Americans’ moral breakdown.

Much of the racial gap in homeownership is tied to rates of family formation.

Fitzgerald’s novel has lost neither its glamour nor its moral force.

On the tendency of criminals to describe their deeds using the passive mood

In an increasingly urbanized world, earthquakes threaten unprepared cities with mass destruction.

An elite law firm’s inability to promote enough minority partners exposes the unrealistic expectations of diversity mandates.

The legal profession, once a guardian of republican government, is now a force for social upheaval.

For Roger Angell, who died in May at 101, baseball was the subject of a lifetime.

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The assassination of Brian Thompson does not call for a “conversation” about health care—it calls for a reckoning with Americans’ moral breakdown.

Much of the racial gap in homeownership is tied to rates of family formation.

Fitzgerald’s novel has lost neither its glamour nor its moral force.

On the tendency of criminals to describe their deeds using the passive mood

In an increasingly urbanized world, earthquakes threaten unprepared cities with mass destruction.

An elite law firm’s inability to promote enough minority partners exposes the unrealistic expectations of diversity mandates.

The legal profession, once a guardian of republican government, is now a force for social upheaval.

For Roger Angell, who died in May at 101, baseball was the subject of a lifetime.

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.
