Prosecutors Seek Simpler Path in Trump Election Case After Immunity Ruling
In a court filing, prosecutors suggested their revisions would let them steer clear of the Supreme Court ruling on immunity. Donald Trump’s lawyers made clear they would continue broad attacks on the case.
As Israel Keeps Fighting in West Bank, Residents in One Area Assess the Damage
In the Nur Shams area near Tulkarm, Israeli bulldozers have chewed up large chunks of the roads, and many homes have been left without running water.
For Generations of Alaskans, a Livelihood Is Under Threat
Something is broken in the economics of the state’s fishing industry and the communities that have long depended upon it. Can Washington come to the rescue?
The Angry East
As east Germans vote, a region in decline is searching for answers on the political extremes.
Here’s Why We Shouldn’t Demean Trump Voters
Educated liberals often view the conservative working class with a whiff of condescension that is both unfair and counterproductive.
Kamala Harris Wants You To Retire Your ‘Future Is Female’ Sign
Can she finally move us past identity politics?
I Swore Off Air-Conditioning, and You Can, Too
The more time we can spend outside or inside without the air-conditioner blasting, the better prepared we’ll be — both to slow climate change and to adapt to it.
America Does Not Need the Death Penalty
President Biden should fulfill his promise to work to pass legislation to end the use of capital punishment for federal crimes.
A Playlist to Remember
Songs can help demarcate this chapter of your life: It’s a way to mark time, to keep one period of time from bleeding indistinctly into the next.
Trump Contorts Himself on Abortion in Search of Political Gain
The former president is willing to make as many rhetorical and policy shifts as he deems necessary to win in November, vexing some social conservatives.
In Rachel Kushner’s New Novel ‘Creation Lake,’ a Spy Thinks She’s ‘Authoring the World’ Around Her
In her new novel, Rachel Kushner invents a secret agent who’s not really all that different from a novelist.
Gaza, Lebanon, West Bank: Why Is Israel Fighting So Many Wars?
As well as its conflict with Hamas, Israel is battling along its border with Lebanon, waging a counterinsurgency in the occupied West Bank and exchanging sporadic fire with Iran and its regional proxies.
Gaza Polio Crisis: What We Know
Israel and Hamas have agreed to brief pauses in fighting so that humanitarian workers can begin an inoculation campaign.
A Roller Derby Team Becomes a Bastion of Resistance to a Transgender Ban
In New York’s Nassau County, the Roller Rebels have joined with civil rights lawyers to face down the Republican county executive, Bruce Blakeman.
Brazil Blocks X After Musk Ignores Court Orders
The social network began to go dark in the nation of 200 million, the result of an escalating fight between Elon Musk and a Brazilian judge over what can be said online.
In South Indian Cinema, a #MeToo Reckoning Comes Roaring Back
A report withheld since 2019 has finally been released, providing damning evidence of sexual misconduct and gender discrimination in Malayalam cinema.
The Debate in Singapore About the New Statue of Raffles
The tribute to Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles, who is considered the founder of Singapore, has raised questions about how the wealthy city-state perceives its history.
In a Biopic of Robbie Williams, the Star Is a CGI Monkey.
The director Michael Gracey hopes Americans will finally get the British hitmaker, who’s depicted warts, fur and all in “Better Man,” debuting at the Telluride Film Festival.
At Pennsylvania Rally, Trump Tries to Explain Arlington Cemetery Clash
At two events on Friday, the former president insisted that he had not been seeking publicity at the military cemetery on Monday and defended his campaign’s actions.
Gaza Faces Polio Threat After 11 Months of War
Starting Sunday, the Israeli military and Hamas will observe brief, staggered pauses in fighting to allow 640,000 Gazan children to be vaccinated, U.N. officials said.