Tag Archives: Politics

NATIONAL REVIEW – NOVEMBER 2025

NATIONAL REVIEW: The latest issue features ‘The Trump Effect’

“If President Donald Trump’s careers in real estate development, television, and now politics have taught us anything, it is that he likes to leave his mark (and his name) on everything he touches,” Christine Rosen writes in the new issue of National Review magazine. “Some of those marks, like the profusion of gilt ornaments and gold, Trump-branded coasters in the Oval Office, will almost certainly be removed by future presidents. Others, like the proposed construction of a White House ballroom or his plan to build a ‘Garden of Heroes’ featuring statues of great Americans, are more likely to become permanent parts of the White House and National Mall.”

The Trump Effect: On the Rule of Law

A country in which law is king asks not whether government hardball works but whether it is legal. Andrew C. McCarthy

The Trump Effect: On Our Alliances

U.S. interests aren’t advanced when America’s allies are less confident in Washington and more inclined to accommodate regional bullies. Noah Rothman

The Trump Effect: On Popular Culture

For much of the last decade, Hollywood has been making the same statement: Trump is bad. But they had no idea how to beat him

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – SEPT. 29, 2025 PREVIEW

The illustrated cover of the September 29 2025 issue of The New Yorker in which Donald Trumps hand holds a remote...

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest cover features ‘Barry Blitt’s “Remote Control” – The President’s watch list.

The Grave Threat Posed by Donald Trump’s Attack on Jimmy Kimmel

The President and his allies are using the power of the state to silence speech they dislike. By Isaac Chotiner

The Great Student Swap

For years, public universities have aggressively recruited out-of-state and international students, charging them higher tuition. But those pipelines may be drying up. By Jeffrey Selingo

J. D. Vance, Charlie Kirk, and the Politics-as-Talk-Show Singularity

Broadcasting from the White House, the Vice-President seemed to complete the merger of politics and red-meat live streams—and to threaten more ominous crackdowns ahead. By Andrew Marantz

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2025

How Outrage at Kimmel Grew to a Shout From a Whisper

Right-wing users on social media on Tuesday were frustrated but not yet apoplectic about Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue. Things changed.

When Cancel Culture Becomes ‘Consequence Culture’

As some prominent conservatives target ordinary people and public figures for comments about Charlie Kirk, they are trying to rebrand a practice they once maligned.

Battered but Undefeated, Hamas Remains a Fighting Force in Gaza

Some Israeli officials believe the military assault on Gaza City will deliver a decisive blow to the group, which continues to stage ambushes and attacks.

What Charlie Kirk Could Mean for the Future of Marriage and Family

Erika Kirk said her husband aspired to “revive the American family.” His legacy could lend new urgency to White House policy discussions.

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – SEPTEMBER 20, 2025 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue featuresHow Israel is losing America

How Israel is losing America

Public opinion is souring even in Israel’s strongest ally. Israelis should worry

America’s monetary policy risks getting too loose

Jobs growth is probably weak because of low migration, not a cold economy

What Elon Musk gets wrong about Europe’s hard right

He imagines a continental revolt against Islam and elites

India could be a different kind of AI superpower

It won’t look like America or China. It could still be a winner

China’s 200m gig workers are a warning for the world

What a giant precarious workforce reveals about the future of jobs

HARPER’S MAGAZINE – OCTOBER 2025 PREVIEW

HARPER’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ – Why the world’s richest military keeps losing wars.

Mission Impossible

The sad state of the American armed forces by Seth Harp

The Good Pervert

A friend’s life, a brutal death by David Velasco

Bedside Manners

Can empathy be taught in medicine? by Rachel Pearson

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – SEPTEMBER 19, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘Divided States’ – Will Charlie Kirk’s Death Change America?

The killing of Charlie Kirk last week sent shock waves through America among both supporters and opponents of his views. Yet until last week, the young rightwing activist was relatively unheard of – by older generations anyway – outside the US.

As the ripples and implications of his death continue to spread across the US and beyond, our big story takes a step back. Washington bureau chief David Smith explains how the young activist rose to prominence and gained a place within Donald Trump’s inner circle, his provocative brand of populism and charisma playing an outsize role in the Republicans’ 2024 election victory. As Steve Bannon, the prominent rightwing commentator, told the Guardian, Kirk’s popularity with young voters “changed the ground game” for Trump and the Maga movement.

Spotlight | Why has England become festooned with flags?
Chief reporter Daniel Boffey visits a Birmingham suburb to track down the genesis of a movement that wants to see the union jacks or the flag of St George displayed across the country

Special investigation | Boris Johnson’s pursuit of profit
A cache of leaked documents show a blurring of lines in the former prime minister’s private business ventures and political role after leaving office, our investigations team reveals

Feature | The porn business stripped bare
In Amsterdam, at Europe’s biggest pornography conference, Amelia Gentleman discovers the perils of a booming industry, from burnout to the advent of AI

Opinion | Trump is just a paper tiger
While the US president likes to present himself as the biggest, baddest strongman, he crumples in the face of Benjamin Netanyahu or Vladimir Putin’s belligerence, says Simon Tisdall

Culture | The power of pure pop
Famous for getting us through lockdowns with her kitchen disco and a stream of catchy hits, Sophie Ellis-Bextor tells Rebecca Nicholson about why the perimenopause is a gift to renewed creativity

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 2025

ABC Pulls Jimmy Kimmel Off Air After F.C.C. Pressure Over Kirk Comments

The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission criticized the late-show host for remarks about the politics of the suspect in Charlie Kirk’s killing.

Trump and Starmer Sign Business Deals on Day 2 of State Visit

After a day of pageantry, President Trump and Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that a technology agreement would help the U.S. and Britain lead the world on A.I.

Behind Castle Walls, the Rich and Powerful Celebrate Trump

The seating chart at the state dinner for President Trump was a cross-section of the rich and the powerful hoping to get on his good side.

Nvidia to Buy $5 Billion Stake in Intel, Giving Rival a Lifeline

The deal between the two chipmakers includes plans to collaborate on technology to power artificial intelligence.

THE ATLANTIC MAGAZINE – OCTOBER 2025 PREVIEW

THE ATLANTIC MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Amend It’

How Originalism Killed the Constitution

A radical legal philosophy has undermined the process of constitutional evolution. Jill Lepore

Fifty Years After History’s Most Brutal Boxing Match

The Thrilla in Manila nearly killed Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier. Vann R. Newkirk II

A Tale of Sex and Intrigue in Imperial Kyoto

A thousand years ago, Murasaki Shikibu wrote The Tale of Genji, the world’s first novel. Who was she? Lauren Groff

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17, 2025

Netanyahu and an Israel Without Restraint

With the assault on Gaza City, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has piled defiance on defiance, as any check from the Trump administration falls away.

Israel Pounds Gaza City as Fears Mount for Those Inside

With hundreds of thousands of Palestinians still in the city, the Israeli military said it was opening another temporary evacuation route.

U.K. Gives Trump a Royal Welcome in 2nd State Visit

With a carriage ride at Windsor Castle and dinner with King Charles III, Britain is trying to appeal to a president who seems intent on upending the postwar order.

At Home and on the Seas, Trump Expands Use of American Force

President Trump’s first term focused on America’s rival superpowers. Now the emphasis is on homeland defense and troops on city streets.

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE – OCTOBER 2025 PREVIEW

October 2025 – Commentary Magazine

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE: The latest issue features

David Is Goliath, and That’s Great

Strength wins, not modesty by Seth Mandel

Forgetting What America Means

Next year’s 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence can’t come soon enough. Both Democrats and Republicans need remedial lessons in basic American principles, stat. by Matthew Continetti

The Despair of the Teacher in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

How can students learn when they can tell a machine to do their work? by Michael Lewis