There Is Nothing More All-American Than the Veggie Burger Fire up the grill and celebrate July 4 with plant protein. By CAROL J. ADAMS
Cages Are Cruel. The Desert Is, Too. For years immigrants have been dying as a direct result of American policy. By FRANCISCO CANTÚ
Op-Ed Columnist Anthony Kennedy’s Imperial Legacy The retiring justice imagined that his personal vision could unify the country. He was wrong. By ROSS DOUTHAT
The Call of the American Lotus Heaven is the Mobile-Tensaw Delta when its mythical flower is in bloom. By MARGARET RENKL and DAMON WINTER
Make Way for Young Democratic Leaders With Joe Crowley out of the running to replace Nancy Pelosi, House Democrats are facing a crisis of fresh blood. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Op-Ed Columnist Local Girl Makes Good At long last, the Democrats have a candidate with youth, fight and energy — and not Trumpian dragon energy. By MAUREEN DOWD
The Rise and Fall of China’s ‘Stout,’ ‘Dark’ and ‘Not Pretty’ Pop Star An unlikely reality-show hero has forced the country to confront its rigid ideas of Chinese womanhood. By YUAN REN
I Did a Terrible Thing. How Can I Apologize? People want to be listened to, not just apologized at. By CRIS BEAM
Let’s Talk About My Abortion (and Yours) Roe v. Wade could soon be in serious jeopardy. One way to fight is to share our stories. By CINDI LEIVE
What Men Say About #MeToo in Therapy Not long after the stories about Harvey Weinstein broke, the topic was on my patients’ minds. By AVI KLEIN
Op-Ed Columnist The Millennial Socialists Are Coming Part of the blue wave is red. By MICHELLE GOLDBERG
At the Capital Gazette, the Death of a Reporter’s Reporter Is it inevitable that everyone will be one degree of separation away from a mass shooting? By LAURA LIPPMAN
Opinion How to Be a Hoejabi For me, the word symbolizes the way Muslim women are never allowed to occupy the middle ground between being religious and sexually confident. By ROMAISSAA BENZIZOUNE
A Warming World Creates Desperate People Gang violence and lack of jobs are reasons people head to the United States. But so is drought. By LAUREN MARKHAM
This Is the World Mitch McConnell Gave Us Donald Trump dominates our universe. McConnell made it all possible. By ALEC MacGILLIS
The Right Has Won the Supreme Court. Now What? Three lessons the Democrats need to embrace, right now, if they have any hope of pushing back. By MICHAEL TOMASKY
The Roberts Court Protects the Powerful for a New Gilded Age Favoring bosses over workers is not just bad for economics; it’s also a threat to democracy. By JEDEDIAH PURDY
Democrats Appealing to the Heart? Yes, Please The enthusiastic response to two recent political ads shows the energizing potential of Democratic candidates with compelling personal narratives. By MICHELLE COTTLE
The Best Book for 2018 Is 25 Years Old Everyone should read “Stone Butch Blues.” By KAITLYN GREENIDGE
Gray Matter Suicides Have Increased. Is This an Existential Crisis? Sometimes people kill themselves because their lives lack meaning. By CLAY ROUTLEDGE
There Is Nothing More All-American Than the Veggie Burger Fire up the grill and celebrate July 4 with plant protein. By CAROL J. ADAMS
Cages Are Cruel. The Desert Is, Too. For years immigrants have been dying as a direct result of American policy. By FRANCISCO CANTÚ
Op-Ed Columnist Anthony Kennedy’s Imperial Legacy The retiring justice imagined that his personal vision could unify the country. He was wrong. By ROSS DOUTHAT
The Call of the American Lotus Heaven is the Mobile-Tensaw Delta when its mythical flower is in bloom. By MARGARET RENKL and DAMON WINTER
Make Way for Young Democratic Leaders With Joe Crowley out of the running to replace Nancy Pelosi, House Democrats are facing a crisis of fresh blood. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Op-Ed Columnist Local Girl Makes Good At long last, the Democrats have a candidate with youth, fight and energy — and not Trumpian dragon energy. By MAUREEN DOWD
The Rise and Fall of China’s ‘Stout,’ ‘Dark’ and ‘Not Pretty’ Pop Star An unlikely reality-show hero has forced the country to confront its rigid ideas of Chinese womanhood. By YUAN REN
I Did a Terrible Thing. How Can I Apologize? People want to be listened to, not just apologized at. By CRIS BEAM
Let’s Talk About My Abortion (and Yours) Roe v. Wade could soon be in serious jeopardy. One way to fight is to share our stories. By CINDI LEIVE
What Men Say About #MeToo in Therapy Not long after the stories about Harvey Weinstein broke, the topic was on my patients’ minds. By AVI KLEIN
Op-Ed Columnist The Millennial Socialists Are Coming Part of the blue wave is red. By MICHELLE GOLDBERG
At the Capital Gazette, the Death of a Reporter’s Reporter Is it inevitable that everyone will be one degree of separation away from a mass shooting? By LAURA LIPPMAN
Opinion How to Be a Hoejabi For me, the word symbolizes the way Muslim women are never allowed to occupy the middle ground between being religious and sexually confident. By ROMAISSAA BENZIZOUNE
A Warming World Creates Desperate People Gang violence and lack of jobs are reasons people head to the United States. But so is drought. By LAUREN MARKHAM
This Is the World Mitch McConnell Gave Us Donald Trump dominates our universe. McConnell made it all possible. By ALEC MacGILLIS
The Right Has Won the Supreme Court. Now What? Three lessons the Democrats need to embrace, right now, if they have any hope of pushing back. By MICHAEL TOMASKY
The Roberts Court Protects the Powerful for a New Gilded Age Favoring bosses over workers is not just bad for economics; it’s also a threat to democracy. By JEDEDIAH PURDY
Democrats Appealing to the Heart? Yes, Please The enthusiastic response to two recent political ads shows the energizing potential of Democratic candidates with compelling personal narratives. By MICHELLE COTTLE
The Best Book for 2018 Is 25 Years Old Everyone should read “Stone Butch Blues.” By KAITLYN GREENIDGE
Gray Matter Suicides Have Increased. Is This an Existential Crisis? Sometimes people kill themselves because their lives lack meaning. By CLAY ROUTLEDGE