The U.S. Denounces Her. Multinationals Threaten Her. She Likes Her Odds.
Francesca Albanese’s provocative allegations have made her a villain to some and a hero to others.
By

Francesca Albanese’s provocative allegations have made her a villain to some and a hero to others.
By

The Supreme Court justice isn’t making decisions based on public opinion.
By Ross Douthat and

I fear that the my daughter’s experience is too often sidelined in favor of a more palatable version.
By

Ten years into the Trump era, Democrats still don’t seem to know how to respond.
By Frank Bruni and

Mamdani Is a ‘Sewer Socialist.’ That’s a Good Thing.
The way to advance his worldview, he argues, is to show that it works.
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Chatbots Are a Waste of A.I.’s Real Potential
Generative A.I. can do many things human beings can do. But that misses the point about how A.I. can truly benefit us.
By

Something Is Stirring in Christian America, and It’s Making Me Nervous
Don’t mistake a revolution for a revival.
By

What Lies Ahead in the Middle East Isn’t Right vs. Wrong. It’s Right vs. Right.
Who would have imagined I’d ever praise something Trump did in the world of foreign policy?
By

The Drug That Took Away More Than Her Appetite
Is a powerful addiction treatment already invented?
By

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The way to advance his worldview, he argues, is to show that it works.
By E. J. Dionne Jr.

Don’t mistake a revolution for a revival.
By David French

Ten years into the Trump era, Democrats still don’t seem to know how to respond.
By Frank Bruni and Bret Stephens

The Supreme Court justice isn’t making decisions based on public opinion.
By Ross Douthat and Sophia Alvarez Boyd

Generative A.I. can do many things human beings can do. But that misses the point about how A.I. can truly benefit us.
By Gary Marcus

Francesca Albanese’s provocative allegations have made her a villain to some and a hero to others.
By M. Gessen

The Supreme Court justice isn’t making decisions based on public opinion.

I fear that the my daughter’s experience is too often sidelined in favor of a more palatable version.
By Emily May

Who would have imagined I’d ever praise something Trump did in the world of foreign policy?
By Nicholas Kristof

The researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky says that what A.I. wants most is not for humanity to live “happily ever after.” “What the entity, the organism, the A.I. ends up wanting has been and will be weird and twisty.” Yudkowsky sits down with the Times Opinion columnist Ezra Klein to discuss.

It seemed that last year’s wildfire in Los Angeles had been extinguished safely after two days. But it had just gone underground.
By David Wallace-Wells

Thousands of hostages are still awaiting freedom.
By Andrew Ross

Readers respond to a Page A1 article about the lack of class attendance at Harvard. Also: Canceling a report on threats; America today.

The researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky argues that we should be very afraid of artificial intelligence’s existential risks.
By Ezra Klein
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Circumcision is the latest example of Kennedy seizing on a hot-button issue that already has entrenched and aggressive internet partisans.
By Jessica Grose

Will Black voters continue to have an opportunity to elect representatives of their choice, or will decades of hard-won progress disappear?
By Troy Carter and Cleo Fields

The war might have ended, one lawyer argues, but the occupation remains.
By Diana Buttu, Daniel J. Wakin and Derek Arthur

Times Opinion convened a panel to weigh in on the race.
By New York Times Opinion

The researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky argues that we should be very afraid of A.I.’s existential risk.

The best safeguard against tyranny is a legion of people who believe in an authority higher than any political program.
By Jonathan Freedland

An American bailout can carry the country only so far.
By Ricardo Hausmann

A pious vision of political economy should get more concrete.
By Ross Douthat

Message to Trump: As hard as Stage 1 was for Gaza peace, you have not even seen hard yet.
By Thomas L. Friedman

Israelis went to war to defeat an existential threat — and an existential lie.
By Bret Stephens
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Readers respond to news and opinion articles about “this historic moment” in the Middle East. Also: Dangerous obstacles to Covid vaccines.

The former transportation secretary argues Americans need a new sense of belonging.
By Pete Buttigieg, David Leonhardt and Jillian Weinberger

We are paying a tremendous political and psychological cost for access to social media.
By Thomas B. Edsall

Like the dot-com bust and the housing crisis, an implosion of the A.I. boom would hurt.
By Jared Bernstein and Ryan Cummings

Lessons from previous anti-immigrant sweeps don’t look good for the Trump administration.
By Gerald F. Seib

We long for community. Why do so few of us try to build it?
By Louise Perry
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