Politics
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Commentary: Will generative AI robots replace surgeons?
In medicine’s history, the best technologies didn’t just improve clinical practice. They turned traditional medicine on its head.
For example, advances like CT, MRI, and ultrasound machines did more than merely improve diagnostic accuracy. They diminished the importance of the physical exam and the physicians who excelled at it.
Now, an ...Read more
Commentary: US health care in 2025: Chaos, costs, and controversy without real progress
The year 2025 has been one of the most turbulent years in modern U.S. health care. The headlines were explosive, the rhetoric dramatic, and the controversies nonstop. Yet for all the hoopla and upheaval, the medical care Americans receive now, month in and month out, looks no better than what they experienced on Jan. 1 — but far more expensive...Read more
Commentary: For animals' sake, let's not start the New Year with a bang
What are you doing New Year’s Eve? Showing up at a friend’s doorstep to smash a plate? Eating a dozen grapes in sync with the 12 chimes of the clock? Perhaps you’re planning to bang a loaf of bread against the wall and then deep-clean your house before midnight. Or maybe you’re bringing luck, love or peace in the new year by putting on a...Read more
Editorial: A bigger European Union must be a better one, too
Does the European Union — 27 states, 450 million people, politically fractious even in the best of times — need to expand even more? The answer, in the European way, is a qualified and equivocal yes.
Nine countries are officially in line to join the bloc, and EU officials have recently hinted some may be added by 2030. The European ...Read more
Javier Blas: The Suez Canal reopening is a 2026 gift for commodities
The business of shipping goods around the world has suffered shock after shock since 2000, culminating in the effective closure of the Red Sea and Suez Canal two years ago. Don’t say it too loud, but there’s a good chance the waterway can reopen in 2026, reducing transportation costs and easing the strain on global supply chains.
It's hard ...Read more
Karishma Vaswani: Islamic State isn't back in Asia, but its ideas endure
The deadliest domestic terror attack in Australia’s history is raising an uncomfortable question: Is there an Islamic State revival in Asia?
Despite years of counterterrorism successes and the group’s territorial collapse in Iraq and Syria, the assault at Sydney’s Bondi Beach highlighted a troubling reality: This radical ideology remains...Read more
Commentary: Farmers should unite to fight unfair trade policies
2025 has been a tough year for farmers.
As if the perennial problems of price volatility and changing weather patterns were not enough, the Trump administration’s trade war with China made matters worse. In the past year, grain farmers have seen their markets increasingly taken by their Brazilian counterparts. Even after reaching a deal to ...Read more
Commentary: Federal policy ignores the most perilous weeks of addiction treatment
Federal agencies are preparing new guidance on recovery housing, transitional housing and long-term recovery supports. The shift comes at a time when communities face growing pressure from rising addiction, repeat overdoses, and a widening gap between treatment and stable housing. Programs serving people in recovery need clearer expectations, ...Read more
Michael Hiltzik: What does Trump have against Venezuela? His explanations keep changing
President Donald Trump's geopolitical ambitions have almost been harder to follow than his other policies, encompassing as they have the annexation of Greenland, the conversion of Canada into the 51st state and the retaking of the Panama Canal.
Trump's current focus is on Venezuela, which has been led by the dictator Nicolás Maduro since 2013....Read more
Editorial: Ban social media for teens younger than 16
At the advent of Facebook in 2004, you had to have a college email address to create an account. Mark Zuckerberg’s creation was a relatively controlled, college-age environment in which you could learn more about and interact with your peers.
Those days are long over, and kids as young as 13 now can log into a wide array of social media ...Read more
James Stavridis: Hegseth is targeting the military's 'constitution'
There have been recent reports that the U.S. Department of Defense, under Secretary Pete Hegseth, is planning significant revisions to its Unified Command Plan (UCP).
This document lays out the U.S. military's global command structure and defines the missions and geographic areas of responsibility of the most senior four-star commanders.
This...Read more
Editorial: Finally -- Jackpot reporting burden will be eased
While the gaming industry waits on Congress to clean up an inane provision in President Donald Trump’s “one big beautiful bill” that taxes gamblers on winnings they never earned, there is a small bit of good news on the wagering tax front.
The president’s signature legislation, passed in May (House) and July (Senate) without Democratic ...Read more
Gustavo Arellano: 'It's a Wonderful ICE?' Trumpworld tries to hijack a holiday classic
For decades, American families have gathered to watch "It's a Wonderful Life" on Christmas Eve.
The 1946 Frank Capra movie, about a man who on one of the worst days of his life discovers how he has positively impacted his hometown of Bedford Falls, is beloved for extolling selflessness, community and the little guy taking on rapacious ...Read more
Editorial: Climate change Grinches look to ruin the holidays
Who doesn’t have a soft spot for the smells of the holidays? The aromatic cinnamon stick flavoring a cup of eggnog or the hint of vanilla in grandma’s baked goods can trigger wonderful memories of the Christmas season.
Leave it to progressive climate Grinches to warn that global warming represents a threat to some of these cherished ...Read more
George Skelton: A lump of coal for Trump, a governor focused on California and other Christmas wishes
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — I’ve got a wish list for Santa and it’s topped by this urgent request: a remodeled president with at least an ounce of humanity and humility.
Maybe a Ronald Reagan type. I’m not referring here to ideology or policies. Just common decency, someone who acts presidential.
I know, forget it. That’s beyond Santa’s ...Read more
Steve Lopez: For Bass and LAFD, there's no watering down how bad 2025 has been
The year was already a debacle for the Los Angeles Fire Department and Mayor Karen Bass, with multiple stumbles before and after the epic January blaze that obliterated Pacific Palisades, so it was hard to imagine that things could get worse in the closing days of 2025.
But they have.
A blistering Times investigation found that the Fire ...Read more
Leonard Greene: Meathead Trump way out of line with Rob Reiner comments
The grisly murders last week of Hollywood director Rob Reiner and his wife Michele, allegedly at the hands of their deranged son, moved me to go back and watch two of my favorite “All in the Family” episodes.
They are both from Season 2. In the first one, “Edith Writes a Song,” a pair of thieves, Demond Wilson (“Sanford and Son”) ...Read more
Abby McCloskey: A case for childlike wonder in a grown-up world
I got my son an Elf on the Shelf this year. Do I regret it? Absolutely. But it reminded me of something this holiday season, something too easy to forget in our modern age.
For an otherwise bright child, my son is convinced that the elf is real in the sense that he moves himself around the house at night and ends up in all sorts of compromising...Read more
Martin Schram: Teaching the world's lost leaders
Just a week ago, we saw how fast a viral video could virally whip around the world.
It was taken during Australia’s Hanukkah-by-the-Sea family-fest that turned into a mass shooting tragedy. Yet it ended with that astonishing, made-for Hollywood heroic twist. It was quickly seen by just about all the planet’s most powerful deciders; and also...Read more
Editorial: Startups offer hope on critical rare-earth materials
U.S. officials from across the political spectrum vow to ramp up efforts to wean the nation off rare-earth mineral imports from China. But the most promising path isn’t central planning or a federal industrial policy, but a reliance on the innovation and entrepreneurship that have made America’s private economy the envy of the world.
Rare-...Read more




















































