Donald Trump and the GOP Tradition of Foreign-Policy Incoherence
It's easy to mock the Republican front-runner. But the “more serious” candidates he toppled don’t make a lot more sense.
It's easy to mock the Republican front-runner. But the “more serious” candidates he toppled don’t make a lot more sense.
“A typical person is more than five times as likely to die in an extinction event as in a car crash,” says a new report.
Letisha Ghanbari has talked people through lock-outs, roadside assistance, and, of course, childbirth.
The latest (very funny and very political) episode of the performer’s sketch show doubles as a call to arms.
Knowing the right people certainly has benefits, but how long do they last?
After a decade of battles, Republicans hope to call a referendum to amend the state constitution to require photo identification to cast a ballot.
Kim Dong-chul of Fairfax, Virginia, was arrested last October.
The success of “joint use” programs in San Francisco and New York shows the benefits of opening schoolyards up to the local community.
“The persistent undercount of the nation’s second largest population group is a civil rights issue.”
Posti, the country’s mail service, will start offering the service next month in an effort to raise money.
Doctors Without Borders says an airstrike on a hospital it operates in Aleppo has killed at least 14 people.
Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone has been suspended from the party after he appeared to suggest Hitler was a Zionist.
The Republican front-runner delivered a formal address on his “America first” doctrine, TelePrompter and all.
As long as Syrian civilians are on the bullseye, nothing will be accomplished at peace talks.
Congress delayed the fight to fund the virus—a decision that comes at the cost of public health and potentially billions for the U.S. economy.
When schools ask applicants about their criminal histories, a veneer of campus safety may come at the expense of educational opportunity.
Minority and female-owned businesses in Philadelphia are cashing in on the multimillion-dollar political convention this summer.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act was intended to protect privacy, but its provisions have not kept pace with the radical changes wrought by the information age.
The justices signed off Thursday on a new procedural rule for warrants targeting computers.
A suggestion for compulsive checkers
They rewire the immune system, so that what used to make us sick now keeps us healthy.
The two sides haven’t found a way to work together—and the fight is getting a lot nastier.
A short film follows a Mexican professional wrestler who dreams of becoming a world champion.
Meet the members of Los Diablos, the only international firefighting crew.
For 50 years, the librarian Gladys Hansen has made it her goal to correct the record.
Lawmakers are still split on how the administration’s viral offensive should be funded, and by how much.
Why hasn’t the Texas senator managed to unite the Republican Party in opposition to Donald Trump? It’s not complicated.
Tennessee is just the latest state to pass legislation claiming to protect conservatives who object to LGBT relationships and identity.
In Trump’s aftermath, his enemies on the right will have to take stock and propose a meaningful alternative vision for the GOP’s future.
By speaking to the discontents of neglected groups of voters, the two men—who share little else in common—have both found political success.
If the presumptive nominee wants to be great at being president rather than just to be the president, she's going to need to shake things up.
Garry Marshall's patronizing 'holiday anthology' film boasts a star-studden ensemble, but its characters seem barely human.
With women explaining periods to men, pop culture is finally treating menstruation as a societal issue everyone should care about.
There’s been an NFL draft since 1936. But how did it become the three-day media spectacle it is today?
The “Boycott Beyoncé” merchandise on sale at her concerts affords her a new kind of appeal.
The series allowed children to build their own story—but it also created false perceptions about decision-making.
The composer Jeff Richmond, who worked with his wife Tina Fey on SNL and 30 Rock, created an elaborate series of song parodies for the show’s second season.
Jeremy Saulnier’s taut, gory thriller follows a band trapped in a rock venue by white supremacists after witnessing a crime.
Low-income students don’t have the luxury of meandering through college.
The group’s cyberwarriors are underfunded and poorly organized, but a recent shakeup could signal a change.
Talking about social network changes as mysterious changes to algorithms turns software companies into false idols.
The agency’s list is growing as foreign hackers continue to attack the U.S.
A new study finds that users don’t ignore a status message just because it expresses a negative emotion.
What rickety, rural suspension bridges can teach us about modern infrastructure. An Object Lesson
As a growing population ages, could computerized assistants provide medical support and companionship?
Researchers say the online encyclopedia should have a source-o-meter on each page, reflecting the quality of citations.
The Green Mountain State could expand its electorate by thousands under a new law signed Thursday.
The legislation allows counselors to refuse treatment to clients based on the counselors’ personal beliefs.
Katehi has been put on paid leave for 90 days while investigators probe allegations of nepotism, conflicts of interest, and squandering public money on PR.
City police shot and injured a 13-year-old boy carrying a fake weapon Wednesday.
The former House speaker pled guilty to violating banking regulations in an attempt to cover up sexual-abuse allegations.
A move to restore voting rights to Virginians with felonies has signaled a new way forward in the commonwealth.
A century ago, the commonwealth's leaders weren't circumspect about their motives.
There’s a common perception that women siphon off the wealth of their exes and go on to live in comfort. It’s wrong.
The Nobel-winning economist discusses the Fed, the election, and the role of economists in fixing inequality.
Compared to 30 years ago, young people today are much more likely to say they’re going to college to secure a good job and steady pay.
It’s easy for candidates to talk about bringing jobs back from China, but making factories the centerpiece of the U.S. economy is another matter.
Nearly 60 years after the integration of Central High, the city’s schools are still divided by race.
And it’s making the pay gap worse.
How do people reconcile a belief in individual autonomy with nationwide wage stagnation?
A biotech company is building devices that will allow people to decipher genes in remote jungles, at sea, or even in space—and they say they’re just getting started.
To find out, scientists collected poop from thousands of people—but they ended up with more questions than answers.
A computational chemist is changing the way coffee makers think about water.
Spaceflight company SpaceX said Wednesday it will start sending unmanned rockets to Mars in two years.
Radioactive boars and bunnies won’t let us forget about the nuclear disaster.
Post-mortem sperm extraction gives widows the chance to have children with the recently departed.
The Zika virus could open the door for a new era of gene-tweaking for pest control and disease prevention.
A review of the available research finds that physical punishment is significantly linked to bad outcomes for kids.
Homosexuality might be partly driven by a mother’s immune response to her male fetus—which increases with each son.
A new study suggests yes, but it depends on the relationship.
An exploration of syndromes that are unique to particular cultures.
Is it because half our brain is staying up to keep watch?
“The persistent undercount of the nation’s second largest population group is a civil rights issue.”
From middle schools to colleges, cellphones’ adverse effects on student achievement may outweigh their potential as a learning tool.
Educators often choose to inflate students’ scores on standardized tests, and the motivations—and effects—indicate that a little deception isn’t always a bad thing.
There’s no one right approach, but they all start with reaching boys early.
A new report demonstrates a stubborn chasm between rich and poor students earning bachelor’s degrees.
Zealously blocking their access to certain websites can end up undermining learning.
New evidence the corporate college perk works.
Conservatives and liberals agree too many Americans are locked up, but that doesn’t mean solutions will be easy to achieve.
Giving people access to services and a place to stay can reduce the number living on the street. Can that be done affordably?
At the possible brink of a new nuclear arms race, questions answered during the Cold War will need to be reopened.
Some people think they can encourage more would-be entrepreneurs to strike out on their own using national and local policy. Can they?
The country’s crime rate plunged dramatically over the last 25 years. What happened?
The United States leads the world in dollars invested in furthering innovation. It won’t for long.
Nearly half of Americans would have trouble finding $400 to pay for an emergency. I’m one of them.
“My son is learning algebra now in the eighth grade, but it’s not the first time he’s getting math. It’s antithetical that we wouldn’t do the same with sexuality.”