Mythbusting Before the Midterms: Lessons From 2024
Identifying-and avoiding-the lines of thinking that doom us.
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Identifying-and avoiding-the lines of thinking that doom us.
For several decades now, girls have been outperforming boys academically. One reason: a shortage of men in the classroom.
Henry Nowak lay dying in the street. Instead of helping him, police handcuffed him because his killer accused him of racism.
The age of artificial intelligence requires the kind of strategic doctrine and arms control that stabilized the Cold War, writes Niall Ferguson. Right now, we have neither.
When is a ceasefire not a ceasefire? When the person declaring it is Donald Trump. Opinions differ about the wisdom of the President's activities with respect to Iran. Some observers tell us he is playing four-dimensional chess. Some say it more like checkers with no kings. What, after all, is he up to? The commentariat
Democratic leaders buried a report that reveals all the reasons they lost in 2024. Now it's public-and most of its findings are still problems today, writes Evan Barker.
Democratic leaders buried a report that reveals all the reasons they lost in 2024. Now it's public-and most of its findings are still problems today, writes Evan Barker.
When Alex Teves' friends and parents attended his memorial service 15 years ago, they all wore blue jeans and white t-shirts. It's the uniform that 24-year-old Alex threw on most days before he left the house. Alex's Dad, Tom Teves, said that his son was pretty easy going: "He was always more interested in relationships."
"It's a Jackie Robinson moment." That declaration by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries struck a curious chord because Jeffries was calling for Black athletes to boycott SEC conference teams to protest not the existence but the elimination of racial discrimination.
This month, American moviegoers will watch Oscar-winner Brendan Fraser as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in "Pressure," alone in a storm-lashed Portsmouth headquarters in June 1944, weighing weather reports, casualty estimates, and the fate of the free world. The film's power lies in what Eisenhower refuses to do: Narrow the decision, delegate the doubt, or pretend the problem is smaller than it is.
Donald Trump has made just about everything he's touched worse. He's going to spend this week bragging about his peace deal with Iran, but please remember that in 2018 he tore up the Barack Obama-negotiated deal that was working, which led Iran to start enriching far more uranium, which then made Trump decide to go to war to solve a problem he created, which is wrecking the U.S. and global economy, which he's now trying to fix in part by reportedly preparing to release around $20 billion in Iranian assets (right-wingers wanted Obama tried for treason over $1.7 billion).
Inarguably, it was a horrible way to die. On May 18, Donike Gocaj opened the door of her SUV around 11:20 p.m., took a step, and, a witness told the dailies, fell about ten feet down a Con Edison manhole that had lost its cover. This, mind you, was not a construction site or some industrial zone full of obvious dangers; it was at 52nd Street and Fifth Avenue, right by Cartier. Twenty minutes later, emergency service workers pulled Gocaj out. By then, she was unconscious, and she never woke up.
Bob Woodson died peacefully at his home on the evening of May 19, 2026, at the age of 89. He was a national treasure, beloved by the thousands he served through the Woodson Center for over four decade
Friday, May 22nd on RealClearPolitics - Joined by Ajit Pai, President & CEO of CTIA