
Rubio Won; Liberty Lost
Is it really a victory when the regime you detest stays in place?

Is it really a victory when the regime you detest stays in place?



Danish forces are moving to the island to show NATO—and Trump—that they’re serious about security.

States are jockeying for an early spot and a greater say in the nominee.

The Oreshnik missile that struck Lviv carried a political payload.


A new memoir shows how a lack of accountability can hurt home-educated kids.

The president once promised to combat the supposed excesses of woke culture, but since taking office, he’s been dismantling something else.
In recent days, federal immigration agents continued enforcement actions in Minneapolis and St. Paul, while state officials fight the Trump administration in court and local residents confront the masked agents in their neighborhoods.

Hans Luther was the principled and respected president of the Reichsbank—but he wouldn’t accede to Hitler’s demands.

While most people are fast asleep, some ultra-introverts are going about their lives, reveling in the quiet and solitude. They challenge a core assumption of psychology: that all humans need social connection. (From 2022)

“But the lesson of all this was not lost on Nixon: the newspapers had threatened his political career; television had saved it.” (From 1973)

“To sense this world of waters known to the creatures of the sea we must shed our human perceptions of length and breadth and time and place, and enter vicariously into a universe of all-pervading water.” (From 1937)


States don’t often prosecute federal officers, but they can.

The historian Timothy Naftali on Donald Trump’s presidential library, comparing the many scandals of the Trump presidency to those of Richard Nixon’s, and Trump’s foreign policy of American weakness. Plus: a head-spinning week of terrifying crises, and Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë.

Grok’s “digital undressing” crisis and a manifesto to build a better internet

There are authoritarian tactics already at work in the United States. To root them out, you have to know where to look.

Younger generations are having a hard time imagining their future.
Track the creative works that tech companies are using to train their large language models.
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