THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 2026

Lebanon Emerges as Weak Link in U.S.-Iran Deal to End War

The conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, once seen as a secondary front to the war on Iran, has become one of the main obstacles to ending it.

Fighting Persists in Lebanon, Complicating Iran Peace Talks

The Israeli military said it had exchanged fire with Hezbollah overnight, hours after a new cease-fire came into effect. Clashes in Lebanon derailed U.S.-Iran peace talks planned for Friday.

Democratic Socialists Took City Hall in New York. Now They’re Aiming at Congress.

After propelling Zohran Mamdani to mayor, the Democratic Socialists of America are trying to take down incumbents in the House and the State Legislature.

Trump Called Him a ‘Radical Left Marxist.’ Can He Be Colombia’s President?

In an interview ahead of the election on Sunday, Iván Cepeda said he was not giving up in the face of a right-wing challenger and anti-leftist anger.

Britain Is Set to Test How Far Charisma Can Shift Electoral Dynamics

The governing Labour Party may oust Prime Minister Keir Starmer in favor of the more popular Andy Burnham — who will face all the same challenges.

REASON MAGAZINE – AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2026

Reason magazine, August/September 2026 cover image

REASON MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘9/11 at 25 Years’….

9/11 and the Surveillance Ratchet

The U.S. government responded in ways that are so integrated into daily life that we no longer recognize them. by Abigail R. Hall

9/11 Turbocharged America’s Worst Foreign Policy Impulses—but Didn’t Change Its Direction

The United States’ shift toward aggressive interventionism was well underway before the 2001 attacks. Emma Ashford

Samurai vs. Squatters: On the Street With the Hired Swords Reclaiming California Property Owners’ Stolen Homes

California has failed to protect private property from squatters. Desperate owners are turning to katana-wielding enforcers to reclaim their homes. Christian Britschgi

AI Is Already Beating Human Doctors in Medical Tests

Robo-docs are not likely to take over healthcare anytime soon, but they could do more to assist human doctors—if we let them. Elizabeth Nolan Brown

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 2026

Attacks in Lebanon and Delay in Talks Test U.S.-Iran Deal

Israel said it targeted Hezbollah militants after four of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon. Switzerland said that U.S.-Iran talks previously set for today had been postponed.

After Deal to Reopen Strait of Hormuz, Ships Begin to Move Cautiously

Shipping companies hoping to get their stranded vessels out face complications like mines and the lack of clear coordination.

The Costs of the Iran War: Thousands of Lives and Billions of Dollars

Factoring in military spending and rising energy prices, the war’s cost for U.S. taxpayers and consumers is at least $132 billion, according to one estimate.

‘Game Changer’? Too Soon to Tell. But Ukraine Flexed in Striking Moscow.

The drone attack that sent plumes of smoke rising over Moscow intensified Ukrainian hopes of bringing the war to Russia.

Mexico’s Laws Have a New Target: Journalists

Politicians and officials in Mexico are using the country’s laws to intimidate critics and the media, forcing them into censorship and blunting scrutiny.

THE NEW ATLANTIS JOURNAL – SUMMER 2026 PREVIEW

THE NEW ATLANTIS JOURNAL: The latest issue features…

Offloading Ourselves

An inquiry into staying human in the age of AI

A New Piece of the Puzzle of Covid’s Origin

Wuhan’s biohazard disposal system suffered a cascade of failures in the months leading up to Covid: new revelations that official investigators have overlooked

You Probably Own This 7-Eleven (and That’s Why It Looks So Sad)

The qualities that make built places charming are best stewarded by people who live there. But America’s soul-crushing suburban districts are now owned by people far away — people who don’t even know they’re owners at all.

SCIENCE MAGAZINE ———– JUNE 18, 2026 PREVIEW

SCIENCE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Brain Evolution’ – Lamprey brain atlas reveals principles of evolutionary diversification.

El Niño is here. It may be the strongest this century

After clearing a spring forecasting hurdle, scientists see growing odds of a powerful climate event that could disrupt weather worldwide

A space telescope is falling to Earth. NASA is racing to rescue it

Vehicle will attempt a daring capture-and-boost mission to extend the life of the Swift observatory

Unlikely chemistry of life may have originated on the ocean floor

Group offers new scenario for how cells came to rely on phosphate molecules

Russia plans deep quest for ‘endless oil’

Soviet-era theory touted by Putin’s former campaign manager claims oil deposits can form without organic matter

HISTORY TODAY MAGAZINE – JULY 2026 PREVIEW

History Today July 2026

HISTORY TODAY MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Declaration of Independence’, Black Loyalists, how England learned Old English, sacrifice and early Christianity, and the Hans Crescent strike.

Disputing the Declaration of Independence

That the United States declared its independence in July 1776 is well known; that the British state commissioned, but never published, a counter-declaration is not.

What Became of the Black Loyalists?

Hoping to weaken the rebels’ cause, Britain offered freedom to enslaved people who joined the British army. At the end of the American Revolutionary War that promised freedom had to be honoured – but how and where?

The Crusade of Hormuz

Looking for a new route to Jerusalem, medieval crusaders turned to the Strait of Hormuz.

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – JUNE 20, 2026 PREVIEW

America's AI power grab | June 20th 2026 | The Economist

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘America’s AI power grab’ – Anthropic and the geopolitics of frontier models….

AI has granted America vast new power

Its government is now the gatekeeper to frontier models—and most compute

Donald Trump gambles that Iran wants money more than power

The peace deal is all carrot and no stick

Don’t restrict Chinese biotech

Patients benefit from faster, cheaper treatments, wherever they are invented

India’s new economy still faces an old problem

Family-run conglomerates make the stock market a tricky place to invest

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 2026

Iran Gets Major Economic Lifeline for Minimal Concessions in Initial Deal

The agreement delays the most difficult steps for Iran for later talks, while granting it crucial benefits.

Trump’s Deal With Iran Opens New Rifts in G.O.P.

Some in the president’s party were skeptical about whether the agreement he reached included adequate concessions from Iranian officials.

A Drone Barrage on Moscow Escalates Ukraine’s Push to Take the War to Russia

The attack, which shut down the capital’s airports for several hours, appeared to be the biggest wave of strikes on the city since the start of the war.

Critics of Russia Say This Critic Isn’t Critical Enough

Warsh Wants the Fed to Send Fewer Signals. That Comes With Risks.

Investors piled on bets for higher borrowing costs after Kevin Warsh opted against providing policy guidance at his first meeting as Federal Reserve chairman.

Kevin Warsh Makes His Case With Jargon, and a Penchant for Detail

LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS – JUNE 25, 2026 PREVIEW

The Paper

LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS: The latest issue features

Collisions: A Physicist’s Journey from Hiroshima to the Death of the Dinosaurs by Alec Nevala-Lee
The First Fascist: The Life and Legacy of the Marquis de Morès by Sergio Luzzatto

Reminiscences of Tolstoy, Chekhov and Andreyev 
by Maxim Gorky, translated by Bryan Karetnyk


The Masquerade: 
A History of Extravagance and Intrigue by Meghan Kobza

THE NEW STATESMAN MAGAZINE – JUNE 19, 2026

THE NEW STATESMAN: The latest issue features ‘The Race’ by Will Lloyd…

Whose national character is it anyway?

The zeitgeist is hard to diagnose – but it has a powerful historical force. By Tom McTague

Elon Musk is the bastard heir of liberal capitalism

The richest man in history spends his days talking about racial grievances. By Oli Dugmore

A modern Canterbury tale

What has become of Chaucer’s pilgrimage? By George Monaghan

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