JOURNALISM
The Virtue of Inertia Has Kept the UK Sane
In a world driven increasingly mad by technological innovations, from Twitter to TikTok to ChatGPT, the immutability of Britain’s institutions has never looked more attractive.
US Teens Feel Down, But the Adults Aren’t All Right Either
America's mental health crisis can’t simply be blamed on social media and Covid-19.
The US ‘Domain Awareness Gap’ Goes Way Beyond Balloons
If a major conflict breaks out with China, America’s once-vaunted defense industrial base will be exposed as a comatose geriatric, not a sleeping giant.
Take It From K-Pop's Finest: Globalization Lives!
Despite dire predictions, neither the financial meltdown nor Covid nor today’s supposed “polycrisis” can unravel the world economy.
Progressives Are Beating Populists Yet Again, But Don’t Celebrate
History shows that builders of big government have a bad habit of getting into big wars.
All Is Not Quiet on the Eastern Front
2022 was the year in which war made a comeback. But Cold War II could become World War III in 2023 — with China as the arsenal of autocracy.
For the Fed, a Red Card From the Seventies
Jay Powell may find, as Arthur Burns did, that tackling inflation is not a beautiful game.
The Dangerous Wisdom of Chinese Crowds
In China, the crowd has played a revolutionary role on more than one occasion. Now, it is forcing the Chinese Communist Party to resolve its Covid-19 “trilemma,” with potentially momentous consequences.
FTX Kept Your Crypto in a Crypt Not a Vault
The rise and fall of Sam Bankman-Fried is a tale of the way we live now — tweeting, not reading.