
Trump Made a Deal That Gives Him Nothing He Wanted
U.S. declarations of victory ring hollow.

U.S. declarations of victory ring hollow.

The president went from threatening that “a whole civilization will die” to claiming a “total and complete victory.” What does the already shaky cease-fire mean as he tries to steer his way out of the war?

“Color-blind and merit-based” now seems to be anything but.


Strength, courage, expertise, wonder: NASA’s moon-mission crew has reset the bar for greatness.

The vice president mocked the European Union for meddling—as he stumped for Viktor Orbán.

Jaden Ivey’s split with the Chicago Bulls was a brutal reminder of how professional sports often work.

The return of TV’s best bromance comes at an uncertain time for relationships between men.

The winning entries of this year’s World Press Photo Contest were just announced. This year, according to organizers, 57,376 images were submitted for judging, made by 3,747 photographers from 141 countries.

It’s not meant to be comforting, but somehow it is. (From 2019)

We’re not doing it as much as we used to. You can be the change we need. (From 2025)

Space scientists won’t say so, but the results of three brilliantly conceived experiments lead inevitably to one startling conclusion: Life, in some form, exists on Mars. (From 1977)

Throughout most of the twentieth century, two figures have epitomized Texas: the cowboy and the multimillionaire. The cowboy is gone, but the passionate intemperance of the six-gun days lives on. (From 1976)


The president went from threatening that “a whole civilization will die” to claiming a “total and complete victory.” What does the already shaky cease-fire mean as he tries to steer his way out of the war?

Fareed Zakaria and David Frum on whether they regret becoming American citizens. Plus: how 18 years of economic turmoil ushered in a new populist era, and a discussion of Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino.

What AI is actually doing to the workforce

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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