Politics
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Commentary: Social media polarized us. AI is about to make it worse
A growing chorus of researchers and commentators is making a seductive argument: that AI chatbots, unlike social media, push users toward expert consensus and moderate views.
For example, a much-shared article from The Financial Times presented evidence that large language models elevate mainstream science and scholarship — in contrast to ...Read more
Commentary: What the New Republic got right -- and wrong -- about free speech at my university
The University of Pennsylvania is hostile to free expression. It has imposed a series of new speech restrictions, especially upon critics of Israel. The campus is eerily silent, even as Israel attacks Lebanon and the United States bombs Iran.
That’s the theme of an excellent piece published in May in The New Republic by journalist Jordan ...Read more
Mark Gongloff: The White House's top science goal is ignorance
Shutting down scientific inquiry because it discovers things you don’t like is a bit like turning off all the instruments on your plane because they warn you there’s a mountain ahead. It may satisfy your immediate urge to live in denial but will soon turn deadly.
The Trump administration’s crusade to dismantle a scientific establishment ...Read more
Commentary: Celebrate Juneteenth with tax justice for all
On June 19, 1865, enslaved people in Texas belatedly learned that they were free, an event that is still commemorated as Juneteenth. It is a day for reflection, resilience and recognition of Black Americans’ enduring fight for equality. But if Juneteenth is to mean anything beyond symbolism, it must also be a call to confront the policies that...Read more
Commentary: American diplomacy is in a quiet crisis
The United States has more unfilled ambassadorial positions around the world than at any point in modern history. Recent reports indicate that 110 to 115 of the United States’ 195 ambassadorial posts remain vacant, a vacancy rate approaching 60 percent.
These aren’t just vacancies in small, relatively unimportant countries. Right now, the ...Read more
Commentary: I didn't care much for dogs. Now I'm risking my life to save them
In the small Ukrainian village where I grew up, you never saw dogs lounging on the sofa or curled up by the fireplace. Dogs, I was told, were to be kept on chains or in kennels outside. Their job was to “guard” the house, although I never understood how that would be possible for any animal, let alone one who could never escape a few square ...Read more
Commentary: America's lead in AI is now at the mercy of local zoning boards
A Gallup poll released last month ought to alarm anyone who cares about whether the United States can best China in the artificial intelligence race. More than 7 in 10 Americans now oppose the building of AI data centers anywhere near where they live — and 48% are strongly opposed, a level of local resistance that exceeds opposition to new ...Read more
Editorial: Spencer Pratt really lost no matter what Trump says
In President Donald Trump’s warped worldview, all elections — not just his own — are either won or rigged. Democracy and the will of the people are irrelevant. Trump alone decides who the victor is, otherwise the election was stolen.
The newest exhibit is the fair and square defeat of Los Angeles mayoral contender Spencer Pratt, a self-...Read more
Jackie Calmes: Trump is stealing Americans' faith in elections
It hasn't even been a year since President Donald Trump, the temporary resident of the White House, unilaterally announced he was adding a $200 million ballroom. (He didn't mention he'd be tearing down the century-old East Wing to make room.) In the 11 months since, the estimated cost of the project that he repeatedly boasts is "under budget and...Read more
COUNTERPOINT: Trump coal bailouts lock-in higher costs, forestall real solutions
People and businesses nationwide are reckoning with rapidly rising electricity costs. Last year, 80 million people struggled to afford their utility bills. At the same time, electricity demand is newly surging from the AI-driven buildout of massive data centers, threatening even higher electricity costs to come.
The need for ...Read more
Commentary: The philanthropic model behind America's presidential centers is changing
When the Obama Presidential Center opens on June 19, it will arrive with the kind of civic gravity Chicago understands well. A dedication ceremony. A weekend of programming. A new landmark rising from Jackson Park after years of anticipation, scrutiny, fundraising and debate.
Chicago has always known how to stage history. What matters now is ...Read more
Commentary: How moms can fight the emotional burnout fueled by modern parenting
At this time of year, family calendars implode under the weight of school performances, sports tournaments, award ceremonies, teacher gifts, graduation traditions, summer camp forms and holiday travel plans. How to deal with it all?
Moms often get a piece of well-intentioned advice: Just trust your instincts. Follow your heart. Tune into how ...Read more
POINT: Coal power is a critical tool amid a power supply emergency
The Trump administration’s embrace of coal power is a timely and essential response to a three-headed energy emergency. The United States is facing an electricity supply crisis shaped by rapidly eroding grid reliability, soaring power demand and ballooning prices. The coal fleet is critical to tackling all three.
The North American Electric ...Read more
Commentary: What Andy Rooney might say about the downfall of '60 Minutes'
The turmoil engulfing CBS News and “60 Minutes” has left me wondering what my grandfather Andy Rooney would make of it all.
Rooney died in 2011 after more than three decades as a fixture of the newsmagazine, and with each passing year I find myself wishing we could hear one more of his droll observations about the state of the world. He had...Read more
David M. Drucker: The GOP's YOLO caucus is peak government
The fact that a pair of Republican senators are being heralded for doing their jobs reveals just how much Congress has atrophied, especially during President Donald Trump’s second term.
Freed from the president’s political yoke, Senator Thom Tillis (because he opted against running for reelection) and Senator Bill Cassidy (because he lost ...Read more
Commentary: Judicial independence over judicial sycophancy
While the president of the United States has the power under Article II, section 2 of the United States Constitution to appoint justices of the Supreme Court and other federal judges, all of whom have lifetime tenure, the president must exercise this power with the “Advice and Consent” of the Senate.
The Senate’s advice and consent ...Read more
Editorial: National security is a job for professionals, not partisans
For all the consternation surrounding the choice of Bill Pulte to oversee U.S. intelligence agencies, it’s hardly the first time the White House has elevated a partisan with few evident qualifications to fill a top national-security post. Congress should insist on a more serious approach to the task of protecting Americans.
Pulte, slated to ...Read more
Abby McCloskey: US parents deserve time with their newborns
The private sector is cutting parental leave benefits. The U.S. fertility rate is at sub-replacement levels. Republicans in Congress seem rudderless in the face of affordability concerns. This is exactly the right time for a federal paid parental leave policy. Specifically, America needs a six-week baseline for all working parents. And yes, we ...Read more
Allison Schrager: The influencer economy has crossed the line
Saturdays in Greenwich Village require contending with the lines. Starting at 9 a.m., you see blocks-long queues of people waiting for all sorts of things: bagels, pastries, pizza, soggy sandwiches, premium frozen yogurt with candy on it. Even if you don’t want to, you will get swept up in a line, because they take over the sidewalks.
To be ...Read more
Commentary: Mamdani is about to make housing even more expensive
New York's Comrade Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, is ready to seize the means of production, starting with the landlords. As always with communism, it’ll mean quality goes down and shortages will appear because the government destroys the incentive to provide the very thing it seeks to “redistribute.”
Interestingly, and contrary to the promises ...Read more




















































