Quantcast
Channel: The New Republic
Browsing all 18197 articles
Browse latest View live

The Kavanaugh Debate Is Dividing Never Trump Conservatives

It has become clear over the past week that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s angry and partisan testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee helped rally Republicans to his side, including...

View Article


A Star Is Born Is the “November Rain” of the Big Screen

It is difficult to think of a recent movie that has come close to the acclaim-versus-quality ratio of A Star is Born. Between the reviews and the buzz and Lady Gaga riding to the Venice Film Festival...

View Article


We’re Still Living in the Boys’ Culture of Kavanaugh’s Youth

“What’s your body count?”  This question might make a certain sense on the battlefield—certainly more sense than asking, “How many people have you slaughtered?” When one’s job is to kill, then it’s...

View Article

Why Republican Women Defend Brett Kavanaugh

“Elect women” became the de facto rallying cry for those opposed to Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh after he was accused of sexual assaulting Christine Blasey Ford at a high school party in the...

View Article

Brett Kavanaugh Is the Point of No Return

The American conservative movement’s long march to install a reliable five-justice majority in its own image is over. On Monday, Justice Brett Kavanaugh will take his seat on the Supreme Court for the...

View Article


Why Don’t We Talk About Peru’s Forced Sterilizations?

Last week, Peru’s supreme court overturned the pardon of brutal Peruvian ex-President Alberto Fujimori, tossing the leader back to his 25-year prison sentence for human rights violations and...

View Article

The Conservative Resistance Inside the Vatican

In August, in a letter published in the National Catholic Register, Italian Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò blamed the Roman Catholic Church’s sexual abuse crisis on gay priests who “act under the...

View Article

Brazil Is on the Brink of Authoritarianism

The stage is set for the second round of voting in Brazil’s presidential election. On October 7, a sprawling field of candidates was reduced to two, the extreme right-wing congressman Jair Bolsonaro,...

View Article


Denying Women’s Ability to Know

Last week Donna Strickland, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo, won the Nobel Prize in Physics. She is the third woman to be awarded the prize in its history—Marie Curie received it...

View Article


Who Says Supreme Court Justices Get Lifetime Tenure?

A good deal of the uproar over the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court stems from the expectation that he will remain there for three, perhaps even four decades. The Constitution, most...

View Article

The Case for Climate Pessimism

Some climate change activists oppose doom-and-gloom rhetoric. They know that, if we don’t reduce greenhouse gas emissions quickly, the planet will soon become more habitable to flesh-eating bacteria...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

How One Inuit Community Won Against Big Oil

In April 2018, the Trump administration announced Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was open for business. By June, two Alaska Native Regional Corporations and a small oil company had already...

View Article

The Good Place Comes Down to Earth

The Good Place is a show set in a special new corner of hell. The person in charge, an insubordinate demon named Michael (Ted Danson), is undergoing a crisis: For thousands of years, he was a loyal...

View Article


Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

In Maniac, the Human Mind Is the Only Real Place

The setting is a pharmaceutical trial of a psychiatric medication. The trial room is like the inside of a spaceship from the 1970s. From the other side of a purple-lit window, a beautiful young...

View Article

The Abortion Case Likely Headed for the Supreme Court

From the moment President Donald Trump tapped Brett Kavanaugh to replace Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court in early July, until the first allegations of sexual assault surfaced against the nominee...

View Article


Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

The Fearless Rise of the Black Southern Progressive

Last December, at the election-night watch party for Doug Jones in Birmingham, Alabama, LaTosha Brown and Cliff Albright were among the last to arrive. The founders of the Black Voters Matter Fund had...

View Article

When the Next Recession Hits

In August 2008, just before the slow-moving financial crisis turned into outright panic, the secretary of the Treasury, Hank Paulson, traveled to the Summer Olympics in Beijing. At a private lunch with...

View Article


In Defense of Politicizing Hurricanes

Hurricane Michael made landfall on Wednesday with winds of 155 miles per hour, just shy of Category 5 strength—the most powerful hurricane to hit Florida’s panhandle in recorded history. It will also...

View Article

In 22 July, Paul Greengrass Misses the Bigger Picture

The British director Paul Greengrass has made dramatizations of real-life events, especially blood-spattered disasters, the mainstay of his career. The Murder of Stephen Lawrence (1999) retells the...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

The Office at the End of the World

Ling Ma’s debut novel Severance begins with the cryptic sentence “After the End came the Beginning.” The End here refers, naturally, to the end of the world. The Beginning, though, oddly points at once...

View Article
Browsing all 18197 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>