So long as Cubans’ rage and despair remain, the government cannot afford to curtail emigration. And there is no end in sight.
So long as Cubans’ rage and despair remain, the government cannot afford to curtail emigration. And there is no end in sight.
A discussion with Zach Lou and Moira Birss, moderated by Patrick Iber.
Matt and Sam discuss Christopher Caldwell’s The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties, a broadside against the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
From 2020 to 2022, Americans saw the state mobilize immense resources to boost their standard of living—and then witnessed the hard political constraints hemming in this capacity.
Sanctuary activists face new challenges under Trump’s second term but their work has always entailed great personal risk.
Matt and Sam talk to Andrew Marantz about “bro” podcasts and their role in Trump’s election victory.
Our empathy seems to make us righteous—even as we benefit from an unequal world.
The late Uruguayan president had an unmatched connection with popular sectors and the courage of his enduring convictions.
Hope has been restored for many Syrians. But vigilance will be needed to ensure that democratic institutions emerge and withstand autocratic impulses.
An interview with Faye Guenther, president of UFCW Local 3000.
An interview with Dara Lind and Omar Jadwat on immigration policy in the second Trump administration.
Trump’s National Garden of American Heroes will be a monument to randomness and a lazy, perhaps unthinking, version of the ideology he is supposed to despise.
The U.S. government is activating a suite of algorithmic surveillance tools, developed in concert with major tech companies, to monitor and criminalize immigrants’ speech.
An interview with Quinn Slobodian, the author of Hayek’s Bastards: Race, Gold, IQ, and the Capitalism of the Far Right.
Matt and Sam discuss the passing of Pope Francis, what his papacy meant, why he scandalized the Catholic right, and why his message feels so necessary and so far away.
The Lord of the Rings is a book obsessed with ruins, bloodlines, and the divine right of aristocrats. Why are so many on the left able to love it?