The famed journalist finds in New York a concentrated form of the universal status struggle.

City residents want speedy and efficient public transportation, not racial or gender quotas.


President Trump has promised not to cut benefits, but Congress can still generate substantial savings by curbing runaway growth.

New York’s child welfare authorities don't see past criminal activity and drug use as sufficient basis to investigate parents.

Narratives against Jews have taken a different turn.

Senators who once denounced the NIH nominee’s ideas had nothing to say about pandemic lockdowns, mandates, or lessons learned.

A simple plan to expand housing supply and make the city more affordable—without political upheaval

Research purporting to demonstrate that trans-identifying individuals’ brains resemble those of the opposite sex often ignores a major confounding variable.

The Conservative Party’s recently elected new leader, Kemi Badenoch, is black—but not black enough, for some, because of her political views.

The Trump administration should end burdensome efficiency mandates.

A green card is not synonymous with citizenship.

The party is struggling to reconnect with its base because it is too weak to stand up to its activists.

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

Parents in the state still value education savings accounts for their kids, but they’re increasingly frustrated with the program’s bureaucratic overreach.

His proposal to eliminate city income taxes for those of modest means will increase the burden on higher-income residents already fleeing New York State.

The former Columbia University student has been a ringleader of anti-Semitic activity and pro-Hamas demonstrations.

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

The Massachusetts city’s housing reforms could serve as a national model.

President Trump’s executive order is likely to conflict with the state’s new “Equal Rights Amendment.”

New York’s child welfare authorities don't see past criminal activity and drug use as sufficient basis to investigate parents.

Narratives against Jews have taken a different turn.

Senators who once denounced the NIH nominee’s ideas had nothing to say about pandemic lockdowns, mandates, or lessons learned.

A simple plan to expand housing supply and make the city more affordable—without political upheaval

Research purporting to demonstrate that trans-identifying individuals’ brains resemble those of the opposite sex often ignores a major confounding variable.

The Conservative Party’s recently elected new leader, Kemi Badenoch, is black—but not black enough, for some, because of her political views.

The Trump administration should end burdensome efficiency mandates.

A green card is not synonymous with citizenship.

The party is struggling to reconnect with its base because it is too weak to stand up to its activists.

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

Parents in the state still value education savings accounts for their kids, but they’re increasingly frustrated with the program’s bureaucratic overreach.

His proposal to eliminate city income taxes for those of modest means will increase the burden on higher-income residents already fleeing New York State.

The former Columbia University student has been a ringleader of anti-Semitic activity and pro-Hamas demonstrations.

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

The Massachusetts city’s housing reforms could serve as a national model.

President Trump’s executive order is likely to conflict with the state’s new “Equal Rights Amendment.”

New York’s child welfare authorities don't see past criminal activity and drug use as sufficient basis to investigate parents.

Narratives against Jews have taken a different turn.

Senators who once denounced the NIH nominee’s ideas had nothing to say about pandemic lockdowns, mandates, or lessons learned.

A simple plan to expand housing supply and make the city more affordable—without political upheaval

From City Journal’s Symposium Series
A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness

Proposals to improve care for the seriously mentally ill

A symposium on higher education in the United States

A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness

Proposals to improve care for the seriously mentally ill

A symposium on higher education in the United States

A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness


Podcasts
City Journal’s 10 Blocks podcast features rich conversations on public policy and culture with host Brian C. Anderson.
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10 Blocks podcast




10 Blocks podcast



The Spotlight
The destructive influence of Wilhelm Reich, father of the sexual revolution

Critics call the populist party a threat to democracy, but many Germans aren’t buying it.

Corporate-jet and private-plane trade groups like the current system just fine—no matter how much it costs ordinary passengers.

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 pandemic may prove as bad as some warn; it is also possible that our response could prove as harmful as the virus itself.

A venerable Catholic school in the Bronx has transformed the lives of generations of low-income, at-risk students.

Mounting liabilities are the greatest threat to the city’s survival.

Corporatist progressivism and the crisis of American higher education

How a Washington public school’s transgender secrecy policies drove an immigrant family out of the country

The destructive influence of Wilhelm Reich, father of the sexual revolution

Critics call the populist party a threat to democracy, but many Germans aren’t buying it.

Corporate-jet and private-plane trade groups like the current system just fine—no matter how much it costs ordinary passengers.

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 pandemic may prove as bad as some warn; it is also possible that our response could prove as harmful as the virus itself.

A venerable Catholic school in the Bronx has transformed the lives of generations of low-income, at-risk students.

Mounting liabilities are the greatest threat to the city’s survival.

Corporatist progressivism and the crisis of American higher education

How a Washington public school’s transgender secrecy policies drove an immigrant family out of the country

The destructive influence of Wilhelm Reich, father of the sexual revolution

Critics call the populist party a threat to democracy, but many Germans aren’t buying it.

Corporate-jet and private-plane trade groups like the current system just fine—no matter how much it costs ordinary passengers.
