Tag Archives: January 2026

WASHINGTON EXAMINER MAGAZINE – JAN. 14, 2026

WASHINGTON EXAMINER MAGAZINE: ‘The Trump Doctrine’ – Why Trump Had To Act In Venezuela….

Why Trump trained his sights on Venezuela

by Sean Durns

✪ Exit Tim Walz, stage Biden: Another Democrat has clung to power past his expiration date

by Scott W. Johnson

✪ Minnesota’s Somali taxpayer swindle: Welfarism plus immigration without assimilation is a toxic mix

by David Harsanyi

✪ Washington’s echo: America and Europe at a crossroads once more 

by Daniel Ross Goodman

✪ Linda McMahon hits the road: Promoting patriotism and dismantling the Education Department

by Salena Zito

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2026

Trump Vows to Make Venezuela Rich. It Will Take More Than U.S. Cash.

History suggests that the price of oil and a wider distribution of wealth are as important as foreign investment.

President Trump to Meet With Venezuela’s Opposition Leader

Maduro’s Enforcer Faces an Uneasy Transition, and a Bounty on His Head

Diosdado Cabello, Venezuela’s interior minister, is accused by U.S. prosecutors of drug trafficking and is linked to repression at home.

Trump Says Iran Is Stopping Its Killings of Protesters as U.S. Moves Troops

Nonessential personnel were moved from Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, an American site that could be a target of Iran if President Trump ordered an attack.

Chinese Universities Surge in Global Rankings as U.S. Schools Slip

Harvard still dominates, though it fell to No. 3 on a list measuring academic output. Other American universities are falling further behind their global peers.

Federal Agent Shoots Man in Minneapolis, Prompting Tense Protests

The agent shot a Venezuelan man who was resisting arrest, an official said. Protesters and law enforcement clashed for hours, as officials urged people to go home.

NATURE MAGAZINE – JANUARY 15, 2026

Volume 649 Issue 8097

NATURE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Little Red Dots’ – Enigmatic objects in the distant Universe could be young black holes in a cocoon of gas…

Putting immune cells into ‘night mode’ reduces heart-attack damage

Drugs that limit the activity of cells called neutrophils could make heart attacks less severe without compromising the immune system.

Ancient ‘snowball’ Earth had frigidly briny seas

Ocean temperatures well below freezing in Earth’s deep-past glacial phases imply some very salty waters.

Disappearing ‘planet’ reveals a solar system’s turbulent times

What was originally thought to be a planet orbiting the Fomalhaut star was probably just the fallout of a wild collision.

Getting to the (square) root of stock-market swings

A huge data set has confirmed a long-theorized relationship between the size of stock trades and the impact on prices.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JANUARY 16, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘The New Age of Empire’

We’re just a couple of weeks into 2026 and already it feels like an eternity has passed.

From Venezuela to Greenland, a blitz of revanchist US foreign policy moves by Donald Trump has thrown the world into turmoil. Domestically, it’s little better: in Minneapolis, the killing last week of Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent – who was defended aggressively by Trump – prompted shock and fury across America.

While some argue that recent events simply represent a more honest, open approach towards US policy goals than in the recent past, others believe such brazen expansionism profoundly threatens the world order.

In a terrific essay this week, our senior international correspondent Julian Borger argues that these events signal a shift away from the postwar rules-based order and into a new age of global imperialism where, alongside Vladimir Putin’s Russia and Xi Jinping’s China, powerful nations use overtly brute force to achieve their objectives.

Spotlight | Iran protests: ‘The streets are full of blood’
After several days of protests amid an information blackout and a brutal crackdown, demonstrators recount their experiences on the frontlines to Deepa Parent and William Christou

Technology | Elon Musk’s pervert chatbot
‘Add blood, forced smile’: Amelia Gentleman and Helena Horton investigate how Grok’s AI nudification tool went viral

Feature | Trump’s assault on the Smithsonian
The US president has vowed to kill off ‘woke’ in his second term in office, and the venerable cultural institution a few blocks from the White House is in his sights. Charlotte Higgins reports

Opinion | As the bombs fell, my family planted hope in a garden in Gaza
Amid constant danger, Taqwa Ahmed ­al-Wawi’s seed-planting was a tiny act of resistance, offering food – and a sense of achievement among the devastation

Culture | Interview with Park Chan-wook
The South Korean film director talks to Steve Rose about cultural dominance, the capitalist endgame and why we can’t beat AI

SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE – JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2026

Readers Respond to the December 2025 Issue

SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘George Washington’s Close Call’ – As a young officer, he nearly lost his life saving others. New discoveries about a battle the future President never forgot.

Samuel Green Freed Himself and Others From Slavery. Then He Was Imprisoned Over Owning a Book

After buying his own liberty, the Marylander covertly assisted conductors on the Underground Railroad, including Harriet Tubman. But his possession of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” turned him into an abolitionist hero

Maggots Are an Incredibly Efficient Source of Protein, Which May Make Them the Next Superfood for Humans

Inexpensive to raise and insatiably hungry for trash, black soldier fly larvae are already on the menu for livestock, pets and, maybe soon, people

See the Blades That Carried Boitano to Gold in the ‘Battle of the Brians’ in the 1988 Olympics

The American’s fabled rivalry with Canadian Brian Orser reached its pinnacle in Calgary on these skates, now part of the Smithsonian collection

THE NEW WORLD MAGAZINE – JANUARY 15, 2026 PREVIEW

THE NEW WORLD MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Iran on the Ropes’….

The only path to Iranian revolution

The nation has changed out of all recognition since the Shah was deposed in 1979. There is now only one way that the country can enter the modern world – the state must crack

Trump’s dark age of spectacle and power

A president without decency or any interest in policy runs America like a TV show: gripping its audience with shocks, suspense and relentless action

Can MAGA tech firm Palantir be trusted to run Britain’s data?

It’s wildly overvalued, politically extreme and puts Trump first – but somehow has £1bn of deals to run Britain’s tech infrastructure

The press that thinks it’s the opposition

Westminster journalists are having a tantrum over No 10 briefings. But the real problems are their right wing bias and focus on gossip over policy

The tough guys who learned to love tyranny

For decades, US survivalists have warned about a future with troops on the street and plain-clothes goons disappearing the White House’s enemies. Now it’s all happening under Trump, they are silent

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, JAN. 14, 2026

China Announces Record Trade Surplus as Exports Flood World’s Markets

A $1.2 trillion surplus last year, the world’s largest ever, came despite efforts by President Trump to use tariffs to contain China’s factories.

U.S. Refiners to Profit as Trump Asserts Control Over Venezuelan Oil

The companies that turn oil into gasoline and diesel are likely to benefit more, right away, than the businesses that pump oil out of the ground.

Venezuelan Envoy to Make First Washington Trip in Years Amid Thaw

Ahead of White House Meeting, Trump Insists U.S. ‘Needs Greenland’

The foreign ministers of Denmark and Greenland were set to meet with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio today.

A Top Fed Official Says the Trump Administration’s Threats Are ‘About Monetary Policy’

Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, defended Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, in an interview.

How ICE Crackdowns Set Off a Resistance in American Cities

In Minneapolis and other cities where federal agents have led immigration crackdowns, residents have formed loose networks to track and protest them.

An Emboldened Trump Places His Bets From Caracas to Tehran

President Trump has left himself plenty of room for maximal intervention. But there are a host of potential wild cards, each with risks for the president.

Dissent Magazine —- Winter 2026 Preview

DISSENT MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Socialism in the City’…


The Dignity of All People

Patrick Iber

The Heaven of Train Travel 

Ellen Peirson

Zohran’s Promise

Nikhil Pal Singh

The Left Needs Bureaucrats

Ned Resnikoff

The Child-Care Challenge

Atossa Araxia Abrahamian

City Limits 

Madeleine Schwartz

Partyism Without the Party

Chris Maisano

More Than Sewers

Aims McGuinness

Mamdani’s Digital Machine

Arvin Alaigh

The Kerala Consensus 

Kushanava Choudhury

Articles
The Demise of Conflict Studies

Wolfram Lacher and Yvan Guichaoua

A New Vision for Public Lands 

Hillary Angelo

Can Unions Strengthen Their Political Muscle? 

Alexander Hertel-Fernandez and Alan Yan

Amazon’s Robot Revolution

Luis Feliz Leon

Reviews
After Eviction

Nina Sparling

Could Democrats Regain the Rural Vote?

Jarod Facundo

The Bronx Still Burns 

David Helps

If You Want Me to Pay My Taxes 

Julia Ott

Capital of the American Century 

Mason B. Williams

Time Magazine Cover – January 26, 2026

The New Old Age Longevity Time Magazine cover

TIME MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The New Old Age’ – What to expect when you’re expecting to live longer…

“What we have is a fundamental change in the age structure of society,” says John Rowe, professor of health policy and aging at Columbia University’s Aging Center, referring to the way we’re aging—and also the way we’re creating young people, with birth rates plummeting in most countries. Globally, fertility levels have dropped below the so-called population replacement rate of just over two births per woman.

It is a sea change—and one that raises big questions about how we both individually and collectively navigate what, in a sense, is our new old age. How, for example, should we spend our extra time? Should employment still be confined to a finite number of years, or instead ebb and flow throughout an entire lifetime? And where, in a world of acute housing shortages, will everyone live?

The New Old Age

Ovaries Could Unlock Secrets of Longevity

9 Resolutions That Can Help You Age Better This Year

How to Think Yourself Young

What the World’s Longest-Lived Animals Can Teach Us About Aging

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2026

Inflation Steady as Fed Considers Rate Path

Consumer prices in December were 2.7 percent higher than a year ago, a similar rate to the previous month. Food Prices Shot Up in December

Shoot to Kill’: Accounts of Brutal Crackdown on Protests Emerge From Iran

As many as 3,000 are feared dead after witnesses described government forces firing on unarmed protesters.

Trump Urges Iranians to Keep Up Antigovernment Protests

Deposed Shah’s Son, Now in Exile in U.S., Seeks Center Stage Amid Protests

Facing Contempt Threat, Clintons Refuse to Testify in Epstein Inquiry

The couple denounced the efforts by Representative James R. Comer, the chairman of the Oversight Committee, to force them to appear, setting the stage for a legal battle.