The New Criterion – The November 2024 issue features…
Category Archives: Reviews
Finance Preview: Barron’s Magazine-October 21, 2024
BARRON’S MAGAZINE (October 19, 2024): The latest issue features ‘The Millennial Divide’….
Millennials Aren’t Falling Behind After All. This Data Reveals the Generation’s Deeper Problem.
Millennials might be doing better than their predecessors—but they also might be the most economically divided generation that America has ever seen.
Immigration Is a Top Issue for Voters—and Companies Like Amazon
Voters will soon decide if they want Trump or Harris to handle the immigration crisis. The consequences for corporate America and the economy run deep.
8 Other Dividend Stocks Beyond the Usual Suspects
With utilities, pipelines, and REITs fully priced and at times dividend-light, yield-hungry investors should consider alternatives like Pfizer and Chevron.
Immigration Is a Top Issue for Voters—and Companies Like Amazon
Voters will soon decide if they want Trump or Harris to handle the immigration crisis. The consequences for corporate America and the economy run deep.Long read
8 Other Dividend Stocks Beyond the Usual Suspects
With utilities, pipelines, and REITs fully priced and at times dividend-light, yield-hungry investors should consider alternatives like Pfizer and Chevron.Long read
Take the Win: Rebalance Your Portfolio Before Markets Get Bumpy
The bull market may be nearing a peak after a stellar two-year run. Rebalancing into these areas could help you avoid losses.
World Affairs: Trend Magazine – Fall 2024
Trend Magazine (October 17, 2024) – How to Restore Trust in Elections, Media Mistrust Has Been Growing for Decades, Can Science and Health Care Gain What’s Missing?; How Better Policies Can Help Build Trust
Americans’ Mistrust of Institutions
Trust in our nation’s institutions has never been lower. And experts tend to blame our politically polarized society, which certainly contributes to the deep unease that is being felt by a majority of…
Data Behind Americans’ Waning Trust in Institutions
If mistrust were a disease, the United States would be facing an epidemic. Over the last half-century, trust in American institutions has steadily declined, and this mistrust has rapidly increased in…
The Founding Debate on Trust in America
As our nation grapples with growing mistrust of all institutions, including the federal government, it’s important to remember that this is not a new debate, but one that has been embedded in the American…
5 Ways to Rebuild Trust in Government
Only 1 in 5 Americans trust the federal government—so how do we restore public confidence? For more than two decades, the Partnership for Public Service has worked across presidential administrations to…
Nobody Roots for Goliath: Why Americans Trust Small Business
We root for David, the underdog facing impossible odds, who stands in contrast to Goliath, the big bully. So maybe it’s not surprising that Americans root for small business in contrast to big business.
Archive
Politics: The New Republic Magazine – November 2024

The New Republic (October 18, 2024): The latest issue features ‘America is So Ready for Kamala Harris’ – How she rose to the occasion…
America Is So Ready for Kamala Harris
This is no ordinary campaign, but it is exactly the campaign we needed at this extraordinary historic juncture.
What “Mass Deportation” Would Mean for the Economy
Donald Trump has pledged to remove all undocumented immigrants from the U.S.—but such a policy could have a slew of unintended consequences.
Research Preview: Science Magazine-October 18, 2024

Most meteorites traced to three space crackups
Young asteroid families seed more than 70% of extraterrestrial rocks found on the planet
Why does COVID-19 vaccine protection quickly wane?
New insights on cells behind long-lived antibody production could spur better vaccines
Are implantable, living pharmacies within reach?
Cell-based drug factories could produce therapies on demand inside patients
The Economist Magazine – October 19, 2024 Preview

The Economist Magazine (October 17, 2024): The latest issue features ‘The Envy of the World’ – America’s Economy Special Report..
The envy of the world
- The budget: how bad will it be? Rachel Reeves looks set to please no one for little return
- Inside Iran’s sanctions-busting An investigation by The Economist uncovers a multi-billion-dollar, America-defying network
- Russia’s spies go feral Vladimir Putin’s “everything, everywhere, all at once” strategy of assassination, arson, sabotage and hacking against the West
- Starship and the economics of space The rockets are nifty, but it is satellites that make SpaceX valuable
Art Insider: Paul Gaughin’s ‘Camille Pissarro’ Tribute
Sotheby’s (October 17, 2024): Presented in partnership with Celine, Sotheby’s Paris is proud to feature the Impressionist masterpiece “Le jardin de Pissarro,
Quai du Pothuis à Pontoise,” painted by Paul Gauguin in 1881, as one of the highlight lots in the upcoming Modernités sale. This painting is emblematic of the early years of Gauguin’s artistic journey. During 1879-1881, Gauguin became a regular visitor of Camille Pissarro, whom he fondly referred to as his “dear Professor.” He often joined Pissarro in Pontoise, where Pissarro had settled. It was under Pissarro’s mentorship that Gauguin began his career as a painter and mastered essential techniques.
These years were crucial to Gauguin’s artistic development, and this painting, depicting Pissarro’s house and garden, serves as a heartfelt tribute from student to master. The presence of two self-portraits by Gauguin on the reverse side makes this piece truly unique. Painted very early in his career, this dual-sided work already demonstrates a striking modernity. Gauguin’s style, even at this early stage, was ahead of its time and hinted at the innovations he would bring to art in the years to come. This painting is a bold assertion of the artist’s emerging identity.
Research Preview: Nature Magazine-October 17, 2024
‘Nature Magazine – October 17, 2024: The latest issue features ‘Rock Family Tree’ – The ancestry and origin of the most common meteorites..
Kids in the classroom flow like water vapour
Young children in the playground behave like molecules in a gas, but kids undergo a phase change in a more structured setting.
Evidence of dead people posed on dead horses found in ancient tomb
A royal burial site linked to the fearsome Scythian equestrian culture contains evidence of ‘spectral riders’ described in Classical account.
Sewage lurks in coastal waters — often unnoticed by widely used test
Global survey finds human faecal contamination in at least one sample from all 18 cities tested.
Two comb jellies fuse their bodies and then act as one
The easy synchronization suggests that an individual jelly does not distinguish its tissue
London Review Of Books – October 24, 2024 Preview

London Review of Books (LRB) – October 16 , 2024: The latest issue features Bee Wilson – Bad Samaritan; Sheila Fitzpatrick – Learning to Love the Dissidents and Adam Shatz – Israel’s Forever War…
To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement by Benjamin Nathans
By Michael Wood
At the Movies: ‘Megalopolis’
Believe Nothing until It Is Officially Denied: Claud Cockburn and the Invention of Guerrilla Journalism by Patrick Cockburn
After Nasrallah
Short Cuts: Reading J.D. Vance
The “American Scientist” Magazine – November 2024

American Scientist (, 2024): The latest issue features ‘Slime Mold Beauty’ – A single-celled organism takes on a dazzling variety of glittering, jewlike forms…
The Myxomycetes: Nature’s Quick-Change Artists
Slime molds thrive in a range of environments, displaying an unexpected beauty in a variety of forms and life cycle stages.
Gliflozins for Diabetes: From Bark to Bench to Bedside
Drugs targeting the kidneys for diabetes treatment stem from almost two centuries of research that began with an uprooted apple orchard.
Baby Talk
Infants are born with the ability to babble and cry in the accents of their mothers through a combination of neurological, physical, and environmental responses.