Opinion

LA City Council sides with criminals over cops in brainless traffic stop ban

The Los Angeles City Council voted 14-0 to advance restrictions on police traffic stops rooted in one dangerous idea: That cops enforcing traffic laws are somehow the real threat...

Republicans get boost with Virginia ruling, but keeping House still tough

The Supreme Court of Virginia sent a shockwave through the political world when it...

One way or another, Mamdani’s rent freeze will mean disaster for those he claims to help

By turning what is supposed to be an evidence-based analysis into a politicized spectacle,...

How Democrats stole Christmas from San Diego

San Diego might cancel its beloved Christmas festival, December Nights, under a cost-cutting proposal...

US military kills 2 ‘narco-terrorists’ in latest strike on alleged drug boat

The U.S. military conducted a lethal strike on another alleged drug-trafficking boat in the eastern Pacific on Friday, killing two suspected “narco-terrorists,” according to U.S. Southern Command (Southcom). Southcom said the vessel was operated by an unnamed designated terrorist organization and was transiting along “known narco-trafficking routes” engaged in illicit drug trafficking. “Two male narco-terrorists...

If the price is right, there is no job Americans won’t do

“There’s no playbook” on how to move forward. This is what Chad Hartmann of Glenn Valley Foods told NBC News after Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers raided his meat-packing plant in Omaha, Nebraska. ICE agents arrested 76 illegal immigrants at Hartmann’s plant alone, which he said was about half his entire workforce, and over 500 […]

Economic isolation started Iran’s self-inflicted military wounds

Israel‘s preemptive strikes against arch-enemy Iran, and a tacit green light by the United States to continue, have capped years of aggressive international economic sanctions. Combined with diplomacy, with recent diplomatic efforts to head off Iran’s possession of nuclear weapons, it’s all set the stage for the Iranian regime’s deep vulnerability. This would have been […]

The bell tolls for the ayatollahs

In the opening pages of his 1940 novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway recites the English writer John Donne’s famous poem from centuries past. “Never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.” Both works warn about the dangers of hubris. On Friday the 13th, the bell began to […]

The immigration protests are more like the nullification crisis than the Civil Rights Movement

President Donald Trump ran in 2024 on enforcing the nation’s immigration laws. As he follows through on that promise, he has prompted widespread opposition from the progressive Left. Protesters have organized in major cities not only to object to his actions but also to impede federal law enforcement. In many instances, Democratic officeholders have joined […]

It’s brunchtime in America

“Brunch” can mean many things. It can mean a greasy family meal in a Hoboken diner where the kids get to choose either a fried egg or a PB&J sandwich. When two other families come over after church for hot cinnamon buns, while coffee flows profligately and the kids pound orange juice, that’s also brunch. […]

Democrats want to get arrested

Democrats have a new strategy to soar to victory in 2026 and beyond and rally the country around their message: get arrested. Evidently jealous of the success of President Donald Trump’s presidential campaign after Democrats prosecuted him, resulting in a mug shot that Trump turned into campaign merchandise, Democrats have decided to try and replicate Trump’s strategy by getting […]

The neurotic breakdown behind Apple’s new sci-fi show Murderbot

“Artificial intelligence” is a tech fantasist’s dream bubble, but let’s play along. Suppose tomorrow’s robots have human intelligence, self-directedness, and skill. Won’t they have our laziness, as well? Murderbot, the latest science-fiction series from Apple TV+, attempts to answer precisely that question. The popular fear is of machines that slay us in our beds. Apple’s […]

Death to … a baby?

It’s not about the supposed cruelty of life support for Adriana Smith or the chance of survival for her newborn son, Chance. What opponents resent most is what the situation implies for their own lives. In fact, the lower the chance of survival for Chance, the more optimistic abortion advocates are. Smith, 30 years old […]

The second coming of Pulp

Amid the recent spate of revivals of British pop and rock music from the 1990s, including Blur’s 2023 album The Ballad of Darren and Oasis’s promised, or threatened, visit to North America’s stadia this summer, the return of the Sheffield act Pulp is the most unexpected and, therefore, the most welcome. When Jarvis Cocker’s troupe […]

Wes Anderson remembers to put humans in the dollhouses this time

In the 27 years since Wes Anderson made Rushmore, his movies have only become more deliriously decorative and ostentatiously ornamental. Among the things audiences will encounter in Anderson’s new movie, The Phoenician Scheme, are shoeboxes containing business plans, multiple rosaries, assorted assassins or would-be assassins, a diplomatic pouch holding handkerchiefs and other valuables, a fruit […]

The rise of the Pinkertons

Some brands become so dominant in their function that their names eclipse generic terms. We ask for a Kleenex instead of a tissue or Google a topic instead of searching the internet. When the word “Pinkertons” is uttered, we conjure the same image: a private detective, or at least hired muscle. That name, Pinkerton, has […]

We should all be thanking Israel

Let me concede it right at the start. We do apply a double standard to Israel. No Western country imposes sanctions on the Jewish state over its illegal nuclear weapons program. No one has suggested that we bomb its facilities or assassinate its technicians. The reason for our double standard should be obvious. Israel is […]

Banana ball, ‘Moneyball,’ and the heart of baseball

Summer is just dawning, but America’s pastime is already in full swing — not baseball itself, but the long-standing tradition of lamenting its death at the hands of ruthless corporate modernity. This week’s inciting incident was the Boston Red Sox trading homegrown slugger and World Series champion Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants, something […]

The terrible fate of John Milton

Is there a book more widely loved than Paradise Lost by an author more universally disliked than John Milton? Catholics dislike Milton for his anti-Catholicism, Anglicans dislike him for his nonconformity, monarchs dislike him for his republicanism, republicans dislike him for his religiosity, and feminists dislike him for his supposed misogyny. Samuel Johnson captured the […]

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