The Ambiguous End of “Remain in Mexico”
In a much-anticipated move, the Biden administration on Friday announced it would start allowing some asylum-seekers, forced to stay in Mexico under a 2019 Trump-era policy, to come to the United...
View ArticleCall Kyrsten Sinema’s Bluff
As perhaps the second-most conservative member of a Democratic Senate caucus that can’t afford to lose a single vote to pass its agenda, Arizona’s Kyrsten Sinema has a great deal of leverage. Despite...
View ArticleThe Botched Democratic Effort to Convict Donald Trump
The second impeachment trial of Donald Trump ended with a whimper Saturday afternoon, leaving time for the long weekend in honor of, yes, presidents. And like a veteran mob boss who sneers at justice,...
View ArticleWhy Aren’t Masks Free Yet?
Last week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the results of its testing of masks for preventing the spread of Covid-19: Any mask is better than none, and the tighter the fit,...
View ArticleArizona’s Democratic Senators Are Already Angering the Left
Last week, during a series of votes on amendments to the Senate’s budget resolution, eight Democrats signed onto an amendment aimed at prohibiting undocumented immigrants from receiving Covid-19...
View ArticleThe Limits of Barack Obama’s Idealism
The grinding quality of American presidential memoirs owes to the cross-purposes they serve: to deliver a point-by-point defense of the administration’s record, while trying to persuade the public that...
View ArticleThe Capitol Riot Killed “Both Sides” Journalism
On January 6, terrorists—encouraged by former President Donald Trump and enabled by his Republican supporters in Congress—attacked the United States Capitol. And as they came for the republic, they...
View ArticleThe Predictable Politics Behind Trump’s Second Impeachment Acquittal
One of the long-running jokes of the Trump era was the notion that its bizarre twists and turns unfolded as though they’d been scripted by a troupe of hack screenwriters, laughing and typing away...
View ArticleWhy West Virginia’s Vaccine Rollout Puts New York and California to Shame
At the beginning of 2020, Maj. Gen. Jim Hoyer was ready to retire. He was turning 60, the usual age limit for leading the National Guard in West Virginia. He’d led responses to every major disaster in...
View ArticleThe Non-Hypocrisy of QAnon’s Sexual Politics
When Ruben Verastigui, a digital strategist who had worked for the Republican National Committee creating social media ads to promote Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, was arrested earlier this month...
View ArticleNevada’s Sales Pitch to Silicon Valley: You Can Create Your Own Government Here
Drive east from Reno, Nevada, on Interstate 80 and you’ll soon hit Storey County, a sparsely populated district of around 4,000 people that hosts some of the state’s most ambitious commercial...
View ArticleCan Historians Be Traumatized by History?
In 1997, the historian Iris Chang published her important, incendiary book The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II. It was a vital work of salvage, resurrecting for a new...
View ArticleConservatives Are Seriously Accusing Wind Turbines of Killing People in the...
At least two million people were left without power in Texas as temperatures plummeted and snow piled up on Monday. Wholesale power prices careened toward all-time highs. Worryingly, some 60 percent of...
View ArticleAndrew Cuomo Wishes He Were Ron DeSantis
Not long ago, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo was amiably shrugging off speculation that he was the leading candidate for the Democratic Party’s 2024 presidential nomination. An August poll found that...
View ArticleThe Retrograde Quest for Symbolic Prophets of Black Liberation
One little-examined legacy of the broader intellectual embrace of race-reductive thinking is something we might call the Quest for Moses(es)—the shorthand branding exercise of privileging the content...
View ArticleThe Consolations of the Illness Memoir
What is writing about sickness for? In the 1990s, Anne Hunsaker Hawkins, a professor of humanities at Penn State, undertook a study of what at the time was a new, and burgeoning, genre: illness...
View ArticleDon’t Let Amazon and Airbnb Get Their Tentacles in Vaccine Distribution
The vaccine rollout in the United States has been a national embarrassment. A doctor in Houston was fired for using ten doses of vaccine that would have otherwise expired and gone to waste. Local and...
View ArticleMistakes Were Made, but Not by Us
What’s it like to be wrong? We have no idea. On Episode 25 of The Politics of Everything, hosts Laura Marsh and Alex Pareene discuss being right all the time. TNR staff writers Walter Shapiro and Matt...
View ArticleTrump Will Be Haunted by the Law for Years to Come
Donald Trump has once again wriggled his way out of his latest jam. Fifty-seven senators voted on Saturday to find the former president guilty of inciting the January 6 attack on Capitol Hill,...
View ArticleTranscript: On Being Wrong
A transcript of Episode 25 of The Politics of Everything, “Mistakes Were Made, but Not by Us” Walter Shapiro: Stage one is anonymity: You want to be the invisible man, you hope no one will notice. Then...
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