Tag Archives: Opinion

The New York Times – Sunday, March 16, 2025

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How New York’s Mayor Wooed Donald Trump

Mayor Eric Adams’s charm campaign involved phone calls to the Trumps and a meeting with Steve Bannon. Mr. Trump showed sympathy for the mayor, as his administration moved to drop charges against Mr. Adams.

Why China Is Worried About Trump’s Tariffs on Mexico

China’s exports to developing markets have soared, opening indirect routes to the U.S. market that officials in Beijing worry may be closed under pressure from President Trump.

Why Maids Keep Dying in Saudi Arabia

East African leaders and Saudi royals are among those profiting off a lucrative, deadly trade in domestic workers.

Young Democrats’ Anger Boils Over as Schumer Retreats on Shutdown

A generational divide, seen in newer lawmakers’ impatience with bipartisanship and for colleagues who don’t understand new media, has emerged as one of the deepest rifts within the party.

The New Criterion ——- April 2025 Preview

THE NEW CRITERION (March 15, 2025): The April issue features

The hard Frost by Brenda Wineapple

Vicar’s vision by Micah Mattix

Ambassador of dreams by Gary Saul Morson

The lush fields of allusion by Rachel Hadas

Ezra Pound & the mystery of the calling cards by William Logan

The New York Times Magazine – March 16, 2025

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THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE (March 15, 2025): The 3.16.25 Issue features Extreme Voyages Issue, Evgenia Abrugaeva on the Ice Age bone hunters of Siberia; J Wortham on a 10-day crash course for surviving the Apocalypse; Doug Bock Clark on adventure racing through a hurricane; Sam Anderson on following the path of The Old Leatherman; Sara Benincasa on a trip to the grocery store as an agoraphobe; and more.

Diving With Siberian Bone Hunters

A search for the fossils of long-extinct creatures, hidden in Russia’s frigid waters.

How Generative A.I. Complements the MAGA Style

Online Trump supporters have embraced a unique form of irony that is hard to parse — and easy to deploy with new technologies. By Dan Brooks

The Old Idea That Could Give New Life to Progressive Politics

During the first Trump era, the resistance engaged in soaring rhetoric about unity — then fell apart. Will this time be different?By Parul Sehgal

    The New York Times – Saturday, March 15, 2025

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    The Senate votes to avert a shutdown after Schumer relents.

    After days of Democratic agonizing, the Senate voted to keep federal funds flowing through Sept. 30 just hours before a midnight deadline.

    Putin Demands Ukrainian Troops in Kursk Region of Russia Surrender

    Talks in Moscow with a U.S. special envoy indicated that Russia was keen to keep negotiating with the United States over Ukraine.

    The Blood Moon Rises: A Total Lunar Eclipse

    The first total lunar eclipse in more than two years lit up the sky last night as humanity, forever fascinated with the Earth’s only natural satellite, watched.

    ‘You’re Tough’: How Mexico’s President Won Trump’s Praise

    A scientist and leftist with limited foreign policy experience, Claudia Sheinbaum seems to have connected with President Trump with her calm demeanor and toughness on the border.

    Commentary Magazine – April 2025 Preview

    April 2025 – Commentary Magazine

    COMMENTARY MAGAZINE (March 14, 2025): The latest issue features ‘In Praise Of Big Pharma’; How American Aid has subsidized Terror and The Coalition of the Sentimental & Homicidal for Palestine…

    In Praise of Big Pharma

     “If we allow the hatred of the industry to continue, we are going to lose investment and people are going to die.” by Tevi Troy

    The Putin Trap

    Washington Commentary by Matthew Continetti

    The Evil of Rationalism

    Social Commentary by Christine Rosen

    The New York Times – Friday, March 14, 2025

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    Under G.O.P., Congress Cedes Power to Trump, Eroding Its Influence

    On spending, oversight and other issues, Republican lawmakers have willingly ceded power traditionally reserved for Congress to the Trump White House.

    White House Withdraws Nominee for C.D.C. Director

    Dr. Dave Weldon was to have appeared on Thursday in a confirmation hearing before the Senate health committee. He has close ties to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new health secretary.

    Can a Billionaire Buy St. John’s a Basketball Championship?

    Mike Repole, who loved the homegrown team of his youth, has helped assemble a juggernaut enabled by compensation rules that one critic says created “the wild West.”

    Veterans Race to Bring Afghan Allies to U.S. Before Trump Travel Ban

    The nonprofit No One Left Behind has raised millions of dollars for flights and other assistance to prevent Afghans from being stranded abroad and face retribution from the Taliban.

    The Economist Magazine – March 15, 2025 Preview

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    THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (March 13, 2025): The latest issue features America’s new foreign policy

    America’s bullied allies need to toughen up

    To avoid being crushed, they need a better plan than flattery and concessions

    The new economics of immigration

    A fresh critique of migration is gaining ground. Liberals must take it seriously

    Trump’s erratic policy is harming the reputation of American assets

    Like the stockmarket, the dollar is also suffering from falling confidence and rising confusion

    The Guardian Weekly – March 14, 2025 Preview

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    THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY (March 13, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Call to Arms’ – The remilitarization of Europe…

    With unaccustomed speed, Paris, Berlin and London, along with the European Commission, are stepping up with a new “whatever it takes” mentality to create a framework for their own defence. Our coverage, led by Toby Helm and with contributions from our correspondents in Kyiv, Brussels and Berlin, examines how fiscal shibboleths are being shed to allow for increased military spending, and from Berlin a growing enthusiasm for Germany’s chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz to consider sheltering under France’s independent nuclear umbrella.

    Spotlight | ‘Here you will die’
    Mark Townsend reports from Sudan on how the retreat of rebel RSF forces has led to the discovery of a torture centre, evidence of what could be one of the worst atrocities of the civil war

    Technology | Roboshop
    Can an AI agent prove itself smart enough to help Victoria Turk with her shopping? And, if it can order groceries and a takeaway, what else might it soon be able to do?

    Feature | All the young Reform dudes
    What is it about Nigel Farage’s Reform party that is attracting young men fed up with establishment politics? Gaby Hinsliff finds out

    Opinion | The Sicilian ways of Donald Trump
    The US president’s way of doing business is uncomfortably close to the fictional Corleone method, but without the mafia’s sense of honour, says Jonathan Freedland

    Culture | Arthouse animation moves on up
    Hot on the Academy Awards’ success of Flow, Xan Brooks looks at how independent animators are taking on the big-budget Hollywood studios and finding audiences are falling back in love with stop-go techniques

    The New York Times – Thursday, March 13, 2025

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    Trump’s Tariffs on Steel and Aluminum Go Into Effect, Inciting Global Retaliation

    President Trump imposed a 25 percent tariff on metal imports, sparking new global trade spats as he attempts to shield the U.S. economy from foreign competition.

    Power, Money, Territory: How Trump Shook the World in 50 Days

    The system America took 80 years to assemble proved surprisingly fragile in the face of Trump’s assault, a revolution in how the country exercises power across the globe.

    Tuberculosis Resurgent as Trump Funding Cut Disrupts Treatment Globally

    The United States was the major funder of tuberculosis programs. Now hundreds of thousands of sick patients can’t find tests or drugs, and risk spreading the disease.

    At Columbia, Tension Over Gaza Protests Hits Breaking Point Under Trump

    There were protests, arrests, the departure of the school’s president. Then, a new administration arrived in Washington.

    Modern Age Journal – Winter/Spring 2025

    MODERN AGE – A CONSERVATIVE REVIEW (March 12, 2025): The latest issue features ‘The Art of Civilization’; No Canon, No West; Kitsch- An Essay in Definition; Flannery O’Connor’s Century…

    Canons Win Culture Wars

    Daniel McCarthy

    Civilization is a product of canons. The Bible is a canon, and while the Iliad and Odyssey were not quite sacred scripture to the ancient Greeks, the Homeric epics went a long way toward establishing what it meant for a man or a city to be part of the Greek world. That world was almost a synonym for civilization itself. What was not Greek was barbarian.

    Noam Chomsky’s War on War

    David Gordon

    Noam Chomsky has attained fame in two different areas. He is a world-renowned authority in linguistics and also a major public intellectual. But while in the former area his achievements are universally recognized, even by those who disagree with him, this is not so for his work as a public intellectual, where he is idolized by some, respected by others, tolerated by yet others, and execrated by more than a few.

    Flannery at 100—and Forever

    O’Connor’s work, fiction and not, is Catholic, gothic, Southern, and timeless.

    Chilton Williamson, Jr.