
Move Fast and Break Nothing
Waymo’s robotaxis are probably safer than ChatGPT.

Waymo’s robotaxis are probably safer than ChatGPT.

The president wants his enemies prosecuted. How far can he go?

Democrats surrendered a spending fight in March—and it all but foretold the October shutdown.

A man who retired as a major lectures hundreds of generals about the need to meet his standards.

The show’s newest cast members reflect the influence of comedy’s current breeding ground: the internet.

A new documentary about the ’90s women’s music festival emphasizes how rare its collective ethos feels today.



Sam Harris on Silicon Valley’s turn toward authoritarian politics and the collapse of the information commons. Plus: Donald Trump’s politicization of prosecutions and Robert Proctor’s The Nazi War on Cancer.
As the days grow shorter and the nights become a bit chillier, animals are migrating and leaves are changing colors. Gathered below are some colorful early-autumn images from across the northern hemisphere.

“I’m just a cultural Jew,” I would tell people, knowing nothing about Jewish culture.


“American football is violent, expensive, and time-consuming; and the number of people who are able to play under these conditions is extremely limited. Rugby, on the other hand, is more rough than violent, and the expenditure of time and money is small.” (From 1952)

“A great many, who have spent their lives in cities, and have never chanced to come into the country at this season, have never seen this, the flower, or rather the ripe fruit, of the year.” (From 1862)


The president wants his enemies prosecuted. How far can he go?

Sam Harris on Silicon Valley’s turn toward authoritarian politics and the collapse of the information commons. Plus: Donald Trump’s politicization of prosecutions and Robert Proctor’s The Nazi War on Cancer.

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.

A visit with Le-Ann Williams and her daughter, Destiny, 20 years after Hurricane Katrina
Track the creative works that tech companies are using to train their large language models.
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