Latest posts
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The City That Wouldn’t Flinch: Zohran Mamdani and the Civics Test Nobody Studied For

There is a special kind of civic panic that arrives when hope polls above forty percent. It hums like a subway third rail, invisible until someone grounded enough dares to touch it. That, apparently, is the mood of New York City on the eve of its mayoral election, where Zohran Mamdani, a 32-year-old socialist assemblyman
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Jonathan Bailey: The Sexiest Man Alive, His Dog, and the Fine Print of Progress

It is both poetic and suspicious that in 2025, the first openly gay man to be named PEOPLE’s Sexiest Man Alive revealed the honor to his dog before anyone else. Jonathan Bailey, a thirty-seven-year-old actor best known for his corset-inducing turn in Bridgerton, his Emmy-nominated heartbreak in Fellow Travelers, and his upcoming high-flying role in
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The Widow and the Wife: Erika Kirk, Usha Vance, and the JD Vance’s Dance of Complicity

It takes a special kind of choreography to turn grief into a political audition, and an even rarer kind of grace to turn moral silence into career insulation. The American right has produced both this year. On one hand, you have Erika Kirk, the freshly widowed tradwife turned opportunist stage darling, and on the other,
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Problem Solved: When Math Teachers Became MAGA’s Latest Enemies of the State

In the country that once invented public education, the new national pastime is death threats. Last week, a group of math teachers at Cienega High School in Arizona discovered that their Halloween costumes—a recurring staff joke shirt that read Problem Solved splattered with fake red ink—had been rebranded by the internet as evidence of moral
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Kash Patel’s $60 Million Date Night. Wait, Someone Would Date Kash Patel?

Every great American scandal begins the same way: with a man insisting it’s not a scandal. FBI Director Kash Patel, the latest maestro of taxpayer-funded romance, would like you to know that when he took a $60 million federal jet for a “date night,” it wasn’t corruption. It was patriotism. Because his girlfriend, a self-proclaimed
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60 Minutes of Trump Lies: The Interview, the Merger, and the Silence That Follows

A president in a gilded ballroom sells tariffs as salvation and testing as deterrence, a network in a deal cycle sells the interview as a moon landing, and somewhere between the wand and the wine glass the public is asked to accept the headline as the truth, not the truth as the headline. It begins
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The Great Gatsby 2: Trump’s Halloween Feast While America Starves

Every generation gets the Gatsby it deserves. In the 1920s, it was Jay. In 2025, it’s Donald. One spent his fortune chasing a dream across the bay. The other rented out an entire country and called it Mar-a-Lago. This week’s masquerade ball at the Winter White House wasn’t just a Halloween party—it was performance art.
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Hillary and Kamala Told You: A Double Ledger of Warnings They Laughed At and We Now Live In

History keeps receipts. Sometimes they’re in the form of subpoenas. Sometimes they’re in the form of women who told you exactly what would happen, then watched you pick the showman over the steward. This is that ledger. The one we were warned about. Twice. Once by Hillary Rodham Clinton, the woman mocked for sounding too
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When the Substitute Teacher Runs the School: Obama’s Return and the Democrats’ Echo Problem

There are few sights as surreal as watching a former president outshine his successors while trying not to. Barack Obama, ten years out of office, has become the most effective voice in the Democratic Party again, not because nostalgia sells, but because competence apparently does. His reemergence on the campaign trail for down-ballot Democrats feels
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The Case for Kamala Harris: The 107-Day Trial, the Lost Race, and Why 2028 Could Be Her Full Shot

This piece is part of my ongoing series where I make the affirmative case for every potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate—their virtues, their pitfalls, their receipts. Each of them gets the same treatment: no mythmaking, no memes, no mercy. Today’s subject is the one who had the least time but left the deepest mark. Kamala