Exposures Back From the Storm In Puerto Rico, communities are still reeling from the destruction of Hurricane Maria.
The Burden of Proof for Kavanaugh If he’s asked to prove a negative, he has to be given room to try. By ROSS DOUTHAT
Still Haunted by Grocery Shopping in the 1980s In the Brazil of my childhood, we battled hyperinflation to buy ice cream. By RODRIGO ZEIDAN
A Retirement Home’s Lessons in How to Keep in Touch A curator finds much to admire in the creative exuberance of the objects in these halls. By GLENN ADAMSON
news analysis Just Don’t Call It Privacy Amazon, Google and Twitter executives are heading to Congress. Should legislators give consumers control over the data companies have on them? By NATASHA SINGER
The Long Year of #MeToo on Capitol Hill What it feels like to have to prep your boss for the Kavanaugh hearings. By BRITT PETERSON
We Were Making Headway on Global Poverty. What’s About to Change? We’ve made extraordinary strides, but the hardest part is in front of us. By BILL GATES and MELINDA GATES
Op-Ed Columnist Sick to Your Stomach? #MeToo Two university professors, 27 years apart, face the gauntlet to tell their searing stories about conservatives headed to the high court. By MAUREEN DOWD
The Stone Nietzsche Made Me Do It What was I trying to escape by making this dangerous trek? By JOHN KAAG
Is This Man the Antidote to Donald Trump? Maybe one superrich old white guy from New York can save us from another superrich old white guy from New York. By FRANK BRUNI
Britain Stumbles Toward Disunion Prime Minister Theresa May finds there’s no easy way to leave the European Union. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
What China Can Teach the U.S. About Artificial Intelligence Visionary research is no longer the most important element of progress. By KAI-FU LEE
The Patriarchy Will Always Have Its Revenge I want to burn the frat house of America to the ground. By JENNIFER WEINER
Coming of Age in American Detention As 17-year-olds they were asylum seekers. On their 18th birthdays they became criminals. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Could Our Sibling Bond Survive This U-Haul? We were so close, and then we all got on the road. By KAITLYN GREENIDGE
We Are Not the Resistance Donald Trump is the one who is pushing back against the new nation that’s struggling to be born. By MICHELLE ALEXANDER
The Coders of Kentucky A bipartisan effort to revitalize the heartland, one tech job at a time. By ARLIE HOCHSCHILD
Let Teenagers Sleep In Starting schools before 8:30 a.m. shows a tragic disregard for both the mental health of children and for science. By HENRY NICHOLLS
Netflix Morning Meeting The streaming service needs ideas for new shows. Lots and lots of shows. By CARRIE KEMPER
I Came of Age During the 2008 Financial Crisis. I’m Still Angry About It. The generation that graduated into the recession is not to blame. By M.H. MILLER
Exposures Back From the Storm In Puerto Rico, communities are still reeling from the destruction of Hurricane Maria.
The Burden of Proof for Kavanaugh If he’s asked to prove a negative, he has to be given room to try. By ROSS DOUTHAT
Still Haunted by Grocery Shopping in the 1980s In the Brazil of my childhood, we battled hyperinflation to buy ice cream. By RODRIGO ZEIDAN
A Retirement Home’s Lessons in How to Keep in Touch A curator finds much to admire in the creative exuberance of the objects in these halls. By GLENN ADAMSON
news analysis Just Don’t Call It Privacy Amazon, Google and Twitter executives are heading to Congress. Should legislators give consumers control over the data companies have on them? By NATASHA SINGER
The Long Year of #MeToo on Capitol Hill What it feels like to have to prep your boss for the Kavanaugh hearings. By BRITT PETERSON
We Were Making Headway on Global Poverty. What’s About to Change? We’ve made extraordinary strides, but the hardest part is in front of us. By BILL GATES and MELINDA GATES
Op-Ed Columnist Sick to Your Stomach? #MeToo Two university professors, 27 years apart, face the gauntlet to tell their searing stories about conservatives headed to the high court. By MAUREEN DOWD
The Stone Nietzsche Made Me Do It What was I trying to escape by making this dangerous trek? By JOHN KAAG
Is This Man the Antidote to Donald Trump? Maybe one superrich old white guy from New York can save us from another superrich old white guy from New York. By FRANK BRUNI
Britain Stumbles Toward Disunion Prime Minister Theresa May finds there’s no easy way to leave the European Union. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
What China Can Teach the U.S. About Artificial Intelligence Visionary research is no longer the most important element of progress. By KAI-FU LEE
The Patriarchy Will Always Have Its Revenge I want to burn the frat house of America to the ground. By JENNIFER WEINER
Coming of Age in American Detention As 17-year-olds they were asylum seekers. On their 18th birthdays they became criminals. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Could Our Sibling Bond Survive This U-Haul? We were so close, and then we all got on the road. By KAITLYN GREENIDGE
We Are Not the Resistance Donald Trump is the one who is pushing back against the new nation that’s struggling to be born. By MICHELLE ALEXANDER
The Coders of Kentucky A bipartisan effort to revitalize the heartland, one tech job at a time. By ARLIE HOCHSCHILD
Let Teenagers Sleep In Starting schools before 8:30 a.m. shows a tragic disregard for both the mental health of children and for science. By HENRY NICHOLLS
Netflix Morning Meeting The streaming service needs ideas for new shows. Lots and lots of shows. By CARRIE KEMPER
I Came of Age During the 2008 Financial Crisis. I’m Still Angry About It. The generation that graduated into the recession is not to blame. By M.H. MILLER