Tag Archives: Opinion Magazines

Opinion & Politics: Reason Magazine – April 2024

Reason Magazine, April 2024 cover image

    REASON MAGAZINE (February 23, 2024)The latest issue features ‘Commander In Chains?’ – What if a Presidential Candidate ends up in jail, incapacitated, or worse – in office?…

    Commander in Chains: 7 Scenarios If Trump Is Jailed and Wins the Election

    An illustration of a person wearing handcuffs in an orange prison jumpsuit with a presidential seal | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson; Source image: Peter Dazeley/Getty

    There is nothing in the Constitution that prevents an inmate from winning the presidency.

    KEITH E. WHITTINGTON 

    Don’t Let E.U. Bureaucrats Design Americans’ Tech

    An illustration of the European Union flag mangled by a frayed phone charging cord | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson

    Some Democrats want to mimic the Europe’s policies on phone chargers and more.

    JENNIFER HUDDLESTON

    The Future of Immigration Is Privatization

    featurefionaimmigrants | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson; Source images: Clay Banks/Unsplash, PinkBadger/iStock

    New immigration pathways are letting private citizens welcome refugees and other migrants—and getting the government out of the way.

    FIONA HARRIGAN

    Commentary Magazine – March 2024 Preview

    Image

    Commentary Magazine (February 10, 2024) The latest issue features ‘Power Broke Her’ – The Rise and (Maybe) Fall of Lina Khan; The ‘As A Jew’: A Brief History; What Putin and Xi have in Common; Hostages – What Price is Too High?; On Joan Didion and more…

    The Power Broke Her

    The Power Broke Her

    The Rise and (Maybe) Fall of Lina Khan

    by Adam J. White

    Lina Khan was pleased with her progress. Appearing before the Economic Club of New York in July 2023, she outlined her vision as the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission under Joe Biden and its success so far. Never mind the fact that, just days earlier, a federal court had delivered her agency yet another high-profile setback.

    Is AI Just Theft Under Another Name?

    Is AI Just Theft Under Another Name?

    by James B. Meigs

    The magazine Popular Mechanics, where I once worked, used to have a column called “Saturday Mechanic.” It was a guide to basic car repair for the weekend tinkerer, and its author had decades of experience both in fixing cars and writing about them. Nonetheless, for each column, he would perform the task in question, carefully documenting each step with photographs. It was a lot of work, in other words.

    Commentary Magazine – February 2024 Preview

    Image

    Commentary Magazine (January 17, 2024) The latest issue features ‘They’re Coming After Us’ – The sense Israelis have that they are personally vulnerable to outside attack in a manner more like an extended military invasion than a terrorist blow….

    They’re Coming After Us

    They're Coming After Us

    by John Podhoretz

    ‘IHAVE NEVER FELT LIKE THIS BEFORE’

    I have lost count of the number of times the phrase “I have never felt like this before” has been spoken in my ear, texted to me, or sent to me in an email, in the three months since the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023.

    When I talked with Israelis on a trip in November, the phrase described a gut emotion few under the age of 50 said they had ever experienced—the sense that they were personally vulnerable to outside attack in a manner more like an extended military invasion than a terrorist blow. They had lived through years of ineffectual rocket fire that was all but magically extinguished by the Iron Dome and Arrow anti-missile systems. 

    The Likely Lab Leak and the Covid Cassandra

    by James B. Meigs

    Enola Gay, or, How the Media Imploded When It Came to Harvard’s President

    by Christine Rosen

    Opinion & Politics: Reason Magazine – February 2024

    Image

    REASON MAGAZINE (December 21, 2023)The latest issue features ‘The Conformity Gauntlet’ – How Universities use DEI Statements to Enforce Groupthink; The Post-Neoliberalism Moment; We Absolutely Do Not Need an FDA for AI, and more…

    Universities Use DEI Statements To Enforce Groupthink

    An illustration showing college graduates navigating a maze | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson

    DEI statements are political litmus tests, write Greg Lukianoff and Rikki Schlott.

    The Post-Neoliberalism Moment

    An illustration of Milton Friedman, Ludwig von Mises, and Friedrich Hayek | Illustration: Friedrich Hayek, Margaret Thatcher, and Milton Friedman; Joanna Andreasson REASON 27 Source images: Graphic Goods/Creative Market, Mosi/Fiverr

    Anyone advocating neoliberal policies is now persona non grata in Washington, D.C.

    DANIEL W. DREZNER

    We Absolutely Do Not Need an FDA for AI

    topicsfuture | Photo: @eshear/X

    If our best and brightest technologists and theorists are struggling to see the way forward for AI, what makes anyone think politicians are going to get there first?

    KATHERINE MANGU-WARD

    Commentary Magazine – January 2024 Preview

    Image

    Commentary Magazine (December 14, 2023) – The latest issue features After Hamas Is Destroyed, Here Are the Five Things That Must Not Happen in Gaza; The Future Isn’t Going as Promised; Putin Won’t Stop; Brush Off Your Shakespeare, and more…

    After Hamas Is Destroyed, Here Are the Five Things That Must Not Happen in Gaza

    After Hamas Is Destroyed, Here Are the Five Things That Must Not Happen in Gaza

    by Richard Goldberg

    Israel is resolved to remove Hamas and its terrorist infrastructure from the Gaza Strip permanently, and for much of the world, its determination raises one question more than any other: What comes next in Gaza? For those who disapprove of Israel’s actions in the war or those who either passively or actively support the role of Hamas as the Strip’s governing authority, the lack of answers provides a pretext not only to demand a permanent cease-fire but to suggest (often quietly and with a furrowed brow indicating supposed realpolitik wisdom) that the path Israel seems to be making for itself is a dead end from which it needs to be saved.

    The Future Isn’t Going as Promised

    The Future Isn’t Going as Promised

    by James B. Meigs

    In his new book, The Conservative Futurist: How to Create the Sci-Fi World We Were Promised,American Enterprise Institute scholar James Pethokoukis writes about the go-go years of the 1960s: Saturn V rockets were blasting to the moon, atomic power promised to make electricity “too cheap to meter,” and sci-fi TV shows like Star Trek depicted new marvels right around the corner.

    Brush Off Your Shakespeare

    Brush Off Your Shakespeare

    by Joseph Epstein

    “Joseph,” my friend Edward Shils said to me, “we have spoken about many things, among them about various writers, but we are both too civilized ever to talk about Shakespeare. After all, what could one say?” Yes, what can one say? Over a long writing career, I have never written about Shakespeare, and, best I can recall, among the many millions of words I have produced, have never even quoted him. Truth is, I have long admired Shakespeare without being especially nuts about him. 

    Opinion & Politics: Reason Magazine – December 2023

    Image

    REASON MAGAZINE (DECEMBER 2023) – The latest issue features The Endangered Species Act at 50 – Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?; Dobbs and the abortion debate is reshaping American Politics; Will Russia ever be free?, and more…

    The Endangered Species Act at 50

    An illustration of animals among green leaves | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson

    Why have so few species been taken off the endangered species list?

    The Abundance Agenda Promises Everything to Everyone All at Once

    Illustration of two statues | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson; Source images: BWFolsom/iStock, Creative Market

    Some progressives want to remove bureaucratic obstacles to growth—in the service of Democrats and big government.

    CHRISTIAN BRITSCHGI

    Dobbs Is Reshaping American Politics

    Pro-life and pro-choice protesters yelling at a protest | Alex Wong/Getty

    A wave of ballot measures reminds us most Americans are moderate on abortion.

    ELIZABETH NOLAN BROWN

    Will Russia Ever Be Free?

    An illustration of a bust sculpture of Vladimir Putin dissected | Illustration: antipolygon-youtube/Unsplash

    Promise and peril in post-Putin Russia

    CATHY YOUNG

    Previews: The Guardian Weekly – January 13, 2023

    Image

    The Guardian Weekly (January 13, 2023) – In Washington, the new Republican majority in the House of Representatives took 15 attempts just to fulfil its primary duty of appointing a speaker. Kevin McCarthy eventually squeaked through by four votes, after quelling a days-long revolt from a bloc of far-right conservatives. But, with a wafer-thin majority, and few powers, Nancy Pelosi’s successor looks set to be one of the weakest speakers in history.

    For our big story, Washington bureau chief David Smith examines the chaos within Republican ranks and what it means for the party. It’s a theme picked up for this week’s cover by illustrator Justin Metz, who took the traditionally harmless-looking motif of the Republican elephant and turned it into something altogether more confrontational.

    In Brazil, meanwhile, supporters of the former president Jair Bolsonaro stormed congress buildings in scenes eerily reminiscent of Washington on 6 January 2021. Latin America correspondent Tom Phillips reports on a dark day for Brazilian democracy, while Richard Lapper considers the potential fallout for the new president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and a deeply fractured nation.

    There’s a feast of great writing elsewhere in this week’s magazine. British food writer Jack Monroe, who taught us how to eat well on a shoestring, opens up to Simon Hattenstone about her struggles with addiction.

    And Chris Stringer, who has received a CBE for his work on human evolution, tells how his remarkable quest as a young researcher transformed understanding of our species.

    Previews: The New Yorker Magazine – Oct 31, 2022

    People dressed in Halloween costumes including a vampire a pirate and Batman walk through Grand Central.

    The New Yorker – Inside the October 31, 2022 Issue:

    Will Sanctions Against Russia End the War in Ukraine?

    D.C. bureaucrats have worked stealthily with allies to open a financial front against Putin.

    How Samuel Adams Helped Ferment a Revolution

    Portrait of Samuel Adams writing on a chair.

    A virtuoso of the eighteenth-century version of viral memes and fake news, he had a sense of political theatre that helped create a radical new reality.

    Sergio García Sánchez’s “Old Haunts”

    The artist discussed Día de todos los santos and taking inspiration from the Old Masters.

    By Françoise Mouly, Art by Sergio García Sánchez

    Previews: The Guardian Weekly – October 14, 2022

    The cover of the 14 October edition of the Guardian Weekly.

    Rebellion in Iran: Inside the 14 October Guardian Weekly

    The women and girls facing down Iran’s leaders. Plus: Putin strikes back

    For the past few weeks, nationwide protests have gripped Iran after the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman who had been detained for breaching Islamic dress codes.

    Details of what is happening inside the country remain patchy, but social media footage suggests action has been substantial, resulting in mass arrests and scores of deaths. Yet Iran’s repressive state apparatus has not been able to quell the unrest or diminish the morale of protesters, many of whom are young women and schoolgirls.

    Preview: New York Times Magazine – July 10, 2022

    Current cover

    The 7.10.22 Issue

    In this issue, Kim Tingley on the quest to make the most of our body clocks with “circadian medicine”; Virginia Eubanks on her partner’s PTSD and her struggle as a caregiver; Mark Binelli on Yuval Sharon, the most visionary opera director of his generation; Jake Bittle on the restaurateur who changed America’s energy industry; and more.