T/past-week
An index of 1,058 articles and 80 interactives published over the last week by NYT.
U.S.
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What to Know About M.L.K. Day.
Since 1986, a federal holiday on the third Monday of January has celebrated the legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
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Inside Minnesota Hospitals, ICE Agents Unnerve Staff.
As federal agents swarm the Twin Cities, their presence has also grown in medical centers. Health care workers are pushing back.
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How Trump Is Testing the Limits of the Presidency.
A breakdown of the presidential powers President Trump has sought for himself, including what he did to obtain power and what’s next.
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Before Urban Raids, Border Patrol Tested Tactics in California Farm Country.
Just before President Trump took office, Border Patrol agents led by Gregory Bovino arrested immigrants in Kern County using the same playbook later seen in places like Chicago and Minneapolis. Then a federal judge ordered them to stop.
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See You Later, Claude: San Francisco Mourns Its Beloved Alligator.
The 30-year-old albino resident of the California Academy of Sciences died last month. On Sunday, thousands paid tribute.
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In Minneapolis, a Pattern of Misconduct Toward Protesters.
Legal and criminal justice experts said a ruling by a federal judge last week revealed conduct by immigration agents that evokes the civil rights era.
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Islamic Scholar’s Post-Sept. 11 Convictions Are Tossed on Free Speech Grounds.
Federal judges ruled that an Islamic teacher’s statements goading men in Virginia to join an overseas militant group were protected by the First Amendment.
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Snow, Seldom Seen in the South, Comes to Parts of Georgia.
Snow was observed as far South as Florida as temperatures plummeted. New York City could get up to four inches of snow and up to six inches is possible in Boston.
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How Many People Has Trump Deported So Far?
In the first year of the Trump administration, it was the nature of the deportations, rather than their number, that changed the most, an analysis of government data reveals.
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Did Hunter S. Thompson Really Kill Himself?
At the request of Thompson’s widow, the Colorado authorities are re-examining his death. “The whole Hunter world is buzzing,” a lawyer said.
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D.H.S.’s Role Questioned as Immigration Officers Flood U.S. Cities.
The Department of Homeland Security was formed after 9/11 amid international terrorism threats. Now, its most visible targets are domestic.
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Shooting at Historic New Orleans Restaurant Leaves One Dead, Several Wounded.
The restaurant, Dooky Chase’s, is a New Orleans fixture with deep ties to the civil rights movement. Authorities say it wasn’t deliberately targeted.
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Conservative Influencer Chased From Minneapolis Streets by Counterprotesters.
A protest at City Hall was organized by a conservative influencer to draw attention to a fraud scandal in the state. He was chased by counterprotesters lobbing water balloons in frigid temperatures.
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The People of Minneapolis vs. ICE: A Street-Level View.
An intense cat-and-mouse game is putting enraged locals face-to-face with heavily armed agents.
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Rick Caruso, a Los Angeles Billionaire, Will Not Run for Office This Year.
Mr. Caruso had the potential to shake up the contests for Los Angeles mayor or California governor.
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Read the Ruling Restricting Federal Agents’ Actions in Minnesota.
A federal judge ruled in favor of protesters in the state.
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Judge Restricts Immigration Agents’ Actions Toward Minnesota Protesters.
A federal judge ordered agents not to retaliate against people “engaging in peaceful and unobstructive protest activity” in the state and not to stop drivers who are not “forcibly obstructing” officers.
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Man Who Attacked a Thai Grandfather in 2021 Is Found Not Guilty of Murder.
Instead, the man was convicted of lesser charges, including involuntary manslaughter, in the death of Vicha Ratanapakdee. The killing became a symbol of rising attacks against Asians during the pandemic.
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U.S. Boardings of Oil Tankers Reflect Hard Lessons Learned at Sea.
Videos show U.S. forces descending quickly from helicopters onto the tankers, two years after a tragic boarding attempt.
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Some U.Va. Board Members Asked to Resign as a Democratic Governor Takes Power.
After months of upheaval at the state’s flagship university, a new Democratic governor appeared ready to shake up the school’s leadership.
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ICE vs. Ice: Protesters in Minneapolis Find an Ally in Winter.
Temperatures are expected to plunge to around zero degrees this weekend. Minnesotans say they will be out in the street, using the weather to their advantage.
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Will the ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Be Prosecuted?
With the Trump administration unlikely to bring a federal case against the ICE agent who killed Renee Good, our criminal justice reporter Jonah Bromwich explains some of the obstacles for any Minnesota prosecutors trying to charge the agent.
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Under Fire From Trump and Their Base, Minnesota Democrats Decry an ‘Invasion’
Officials denounced the Trump crackdown at an unofficial congressional hearing in Minneapolis. Administration officials have accused local leaders of promoting violence against ICE agents.
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Agent Who Shot Renee Good Was Trained to Track and Apprehend Fugitives.
From Iraq to ICE, Jonathan Ross’s career reflects a 20-year government effort to reshape immigration enforcement with a military mind-set.
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Virginia Poised to Redraw House Maps That Could Set Democrats Up for a Win.
A vote by the state senate on Friday could send an amendment to voters that, if approved, would allow the legislature to gerrymander the state.
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Renee Good Was Concerned About ICE, a Lawyer Says, but Wasn’t Following Agents.
A lawyer for Ms. Good’s family said she and her partner had encountered agents after school drop-off. Minutes later, she was dead.
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San Francisco Is on the Rebound. What Happened to Its Ousted Mayor?
London Breed has said little in the year since she left office. She has thoughts on the praise that the current mayor, Daniel Lurie, has received.
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Emergency Call Transcripts Record a Crisis Unfolding in Real Time.
The killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent was instantly reported to the Minneapolis Police. The calls reflect shock, fury and confusion.
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Trump Administration Lawsuit Seeking California Voter Data Is Dismissed.
The Justice Department has sued about two dozen states over access to voter rolls, as the federal government pushes to create a national database.
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California’s Pacific Coast Highway Fully Reopens After Three Years.
The famed highway reopened this week after consecutive landslides shuttered two sections of the road in Big Sur and forced major repairs.
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Couple Says ICE Agents Gassed Them as They Drove With 6 Children.
Shawn and Destiny Jackson said they were trying to escape a clash between ICE and protesters when agents used tear gas near their car. Their children gasped for air.
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Was Renee Good Obligated to Comply With an ICE Agent’s Orders?
The agent told Ms. Good to get out of her car before fatally shooting her. Legal experts said immigration agents may sometimes, but not always, have the authority to make such commands.
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New York Sues Former C.E.O. of Covid Vaccine Maker Over Insider Trading.
Robert G. Kramer sold nearly 90,000 shares of his stock in Emergent BioSolutions, knowing that large quantities of vaccine materials were contaminated, the lawsuit said.
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Minneapolis Schools Allow Students to Learn Online Amid ICE Fears.
As immigration agents and protests lead some families to keep children home, schools around the Twin Cities are offering a remote option for the next several weeks.
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Nick Reiner Was in a Mental Health Conservatorship in 2020.
Mr. Reiner, who is accused of killing his parents, was under a yearlong legal arrangement that allows for involuntary psychiatric treatment.
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Verizon Offers $20 Credit to Users Affected by Outage.
A company spokeswoman said “a software issue” was to blame for the widespread outage that disrupted service across the United States on Wednesday.
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Runaway Emu Leads Florida Corporal in 45-Minute Police Chase.
A corporal in St. Johns County had responded to what he thought would be a straightforward call about an animal on the loose. Nearly an hour later, he was putting handcuffs on an emu named Tina.
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Runaway Emu Leads Sheriff’s Corporal on 45-Minute Chase.
An emu named Tina escaped from a farm in Florida last Friday. Body camera footage captured a sheriff’s office corporal chasing the large bird and eventually putting it in handcuffs.
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Maps: 3.1-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes the San Francisco Bay Area.
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
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Here’s the latest.
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How We Photographed an ICE Confrontation in Minneapolis.
Our visual journalists David Guttenfelder and Todd Heisler describe a dramatic incident in which federal agents dragged a woman out of her car in Minneapolis near where Renee Nicole Good had been killed days before.
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One State, Two Very Different Views of Minneapolis.
Pull up a stool at Ye Olde Pickle Factory and listen to a story about America’s urban-rural divide.
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Chinese Universities Surge in Global Rankings as U.S. Schools Slip.
Harvard still dominates, though it fell to No. 3 on a list measuring academic output. Other American universities are falling farther behind their global peers.
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Clashes in Minneapolis After Federal Agent Shoots Man.
A federal agent shot and injured a Venezuelan man in Minneapolis on Wednesday night, a Homeland Security official said. The shooting came one week after an ICE agent shot and killed a woman in the city.
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Au Pair Testifies of Lurid Plot in Virginia Double-Murder Trial.
Juliana Peres Magalhães wrapped up testimony on Wednesday in the case against Brendan Banfield, her former lover, who is accused of killing his wife and another man.
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Venezuelan Immigrants Urge Appeals Court to Restore Deportation Protections.
The Trump administration has ended Temporary Protected Status for about 600,000 Venezuelan immigrants, part of a broader effort to curb avenues for immigrants to remain in the United States.
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Federal Agent Shoots Man in Minneapolis, Prompting Tense Protests.
The agent shot a Venezuelan man who was resisting arrest, an official said. Protesters and law enforcement officers clashed for hours, as city officials urged people to go home.
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Boeing Knew About Flaws in UPS Plane That Crashed in Louisville, N.T.S.B. Says.
In a report Wednesday, the National Transportation Safety Board said fractures that appeared to have led the left engine to separate from the plane’s wing had occurred at least four other times.
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Renaming Defense Department Could Cost Taxpayers $125 Million.
A report released by the Congressional Budget Office estimated the amount of money that would be spent on new signs and letterhead, should Congress approve a change.
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Newsom Says California Will Not Extradite Abortion Provider to Louisiana.
The case, escalating the interstate battle over abortion, is the second time Louisiana has criminally charged out-of-state doctors with sending abortion pills to Louisiana residents.
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Trump Signs Bill Allowing Schools to Serve Whole Milk Again.
The law, which was approved unanimously by Congress late last year, also gives schools more flexibility in serving nondairy milks.
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Judge Puts Off Ruling on Minnesota’s Request to Block ICE Surge.
Lawyers for the state sought an immediate ruling, but the judge said she would give the Justice Department time to respond in writing to the state’s lawsuit.
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Can the ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Be Prosecuted?
The Trump administration is unlikely to bring a federal case, and any criminal case would face high hurdles. But charges are not out of the question.
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Playing Catch on an L.A. Sidewalk? You May (Technically) Risk Jail Time.
A little-known and rarely enforced law prohibits ball games on some Los Angeles streets and sidewalks. The local council has begun the process of repealing it.
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How ICE Crackdowns Set Off a Resistance in American Cities.
In Minneapolis and other cities where federal agents have led immigration crackdowns, residents have formed loose networks to track and protest them.
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Clashes With Federal Agents in Minneapolis Escalate.
Fear and frustration among residents in Minneapolis have mounted as ICE and Border Patrol agents have deployed aggressive tactics and conducted arrests after the killing of Renee Good by an immigration officer last week.
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ICE Arrested Dozens of Refugees in Minnesota and Sent Them to Texas, Lawyers Say.
The refugees, many of them from Somalia, had passed security screenings before coming to the United States. The Trump administration has vowed to “re-examine thousands of refugee cases.”
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Louisiana Indicts Another Out-of-State Doctor Over Abortion Pills.
The indictment, followed by a request to extradite the doctor from California, is an escalation of Louisiana’s efforts to counter states that support providing abortions.
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Olympic Fans Get First Chance to Buy Tickets to 2028 Games in Los Angeles.
Starting Wednesday, prospective buyers can enter a lottery to get a chance to purchase the first tickets in April.
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Paraglider Survives 500-Foot Crash Into Ocean Off Florida, Rescuers Say.
A bystander captured the misadventure in a video that drew widespread attention online. Lifeguards and a snorkeler helped rescue the man.
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Paraglider Survives 500-Foot Plunge Into Ocean off Florida.
A paraglider was rescued by lifeguards after crashing 500 feet into the Atlantic Ocean off Florida on Friday.
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In Secret Testimony, Republicans Derided Trump’s Stolen Election Claims.
The testimony, part of the derailed Georgia election interference case, makes clear how dismissive some senior Republicans were of claims of widespread fraud in the 2020 election.
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Timothy Busfield, Actor and Director, Turns Himself In for Child Sex Abuse Charges.
He was booked on Tuesday, the Albuquerque police said. He is accused of inappropriately touching two boys on the set of a drama series.
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‘Like a Military Occupation’: Clashes Rise With Federal Agents in Minneapolis.
Arrests and aggressive tactics by ICE and the Border Patrol, many seen on viral videos, have intensified the frustration and fear among residents.
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3 Prosecutors Quit After Push to Investigate ICE Shooting Victim’s Widow.
Joseph H. Thompson, a career federal prosecutor who was the acting U.S. attorney for Minnesota last year, quit after the Justice Department sought to examine the woman’s supposed ties to activist groups.
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Six Prosecutors Quit Over Push to Investigate ICE Shooting Victim’s Widow.
Joseph H. Thompson, a career federal prosecutor who was the acting U.S. attorney for Minnesota last year, was among those who resigned as the Justice Department sought to examine the woman’s supposed ties to activist groups.
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Read the Clintons’ Personal Letter to Comer.
Bill and Hillary Clinton wrote a lengthy letter to Representative James R. Comer of Kentucky, the Republican chairman of the Oversight Committee, refusing to testify in Congress.
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Ask The Morning: ICE and Deportations.
Have questions about the Trump administration’s deportation efforts? We will try to find answers.
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What Seniors Are Writing About in Their College Admissions Essays.
Some students are still mentioning their race or immigrant status as the Trump administration cracks down on diversity efforts. But many are avoiding sensitive aspects of their identity.
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Newsom Vows to Stop Proposed Billionaire Tax in California.
Gov. Gavin Newsom said he was working behind the scenes to block a proposed tax on billionaires’ wealth and was committed to defeating the measure if it reached the ballot.
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Synagogue Is Vandalized Days After Anniversary of L.A. Wildfire That Leveled It.
Graffiti denouncing Zionism was discovered Sunday on a wall of the campus, which has not yet been rebuilt after the Eaton fire.
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Former U.S. Navy Sailor Gets Nearly 17 Years in Prison for Spying for China.
Jinchao Wei sold technical manuals for American warships to a Chinese intelligence officer who had recruited him on social media.
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Former Congressional Employee Accused of Stealing 240 Phones.
A Maryland man used his government job to order new cellphones worth over $150,000 and then sell them to a pawnshop, federal prosecutors said.
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Arson Suspect Targeted Mississippi Synagogue for Its ‘Jewish Ties,’ F.B.I. Says.
The suspect, Stephen Spencer Pittman, was turned in by his father, who said his son had laughed as he confessed to the fire that damaged the synagogue, investigators said.
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Illinois Doctor Charged With Murder in Shooting of Ex-Wife and Her Husband.
Monique and Spencer Tepe were fatally shot in their home in Columbus, Ohio, last month. Their two young children were found in the home, unharmed, the police said.
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University of Michigan Picks Syracuse Leader as Its Next President.
Kent D. Syverud will become the fifth person to run Michigan since the start of 2022, inheriting a school that also has debated diversity.
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What Our Photographer Saw in Minneapolis.
David Guttenfelder, a visual journalist for The New York Times, was at the scene in Minneapolis immediately after an ICE agent killed a 37-year-old woman in her vehicle. He walks us through the photos and videos he took over the next few days as outrage and protests mounted in the city.
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3 Inmates Killed After Fight Erupts in Georgia Prison.
At least a dozen others were hospitalized after violence erupted at Washington State Prison in Davisboro, officials said.
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Truck Drives Through Crowd of Iran Protesters in Los Angeles.
A U-Haul truck sped through a street packed with demonstrators in Los Angeles on Sunday as they marched in support of the anti-government protests in Iran. The truck hit one person, who was not significantly injured.
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A Green Beret Went on a Shooting Rampage. Is the Army at Fault?
High-tempo Special Operations training can cause brain injuries that accumulate unnoticed. One soldier says that is why he snapped and killed three people.
Elections
Politics
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Starmer Pushes Back Against Greenland Tariff Threat as ‘Completely Wrong’
The British prime minister said his country “must stand up for its values” after President Trump threatened a new tariff war over acquiring the island.
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Trump Has an Offramp on Greenland. He Doesn’t Seem to Want It.
The strategic importance of Greenland is growing, and NATO has underinvested in Arctic security. But President Trump, intent on ownership, is rebuffing deals with Europe to solve the problem.
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Search of Reporter’s Home Tests Law With Roots in a Campus Paper’s Suit.
The Stanford Daily lost a 1978 Supreme Court case over the search of its newsroom. But a bipartisan backlash prompted a federal law protecting journalists.
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Texas Schools Wait as Law on Ten Commandments Reaches Appeals Court.
A state law mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in every classroom has already divided Texas schools. Now a federal appeals court will decide its constitutionality.
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Who Will Win the House? Three Maps Tell a Tale of the 2026 Midterms.
With control of the narrowly divided House set to be decided by a small fraction of the chamber's seats, a wave of strategic redistricting and a flood of retirements will play a role in the 2026 midterms.
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Josh Shapiro Writes That Harris Team Asked if He Had Ever Been an Israeli Agent.
In his new memoir, the Pennsylvania governor suggests that when Kamala Harris’s team vetted him to be her running mate, aides focused on Israel to an extent he found offensive.
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Man Acquitted of Shining a Laser at Marine One With Trump Aboard.
A jury found the man, Jacob Samuel Winkler, not guilty after just 35 minutes of deliberation. He was charged in September with pointing a laser at an aircraft.
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Noem Denies Use of Chemical Agents in Minnesota, Then Backtracks.
Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, said officers had not used pepper spray and similar measures limited by a judge’s order, then was confronted with a video that showed chemical agents deployed.
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Pentagon Tells 1,500 Troops to Prepare for Possible Deployment to Minnesota.
But President Trump has already backed away from a threat to invoke the Insurrection Act in response to protests against the killing of a woman by a federal immigration agent.
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Inside Trump’s Deportation Machine.
Data obtained by The New York Times illustrates the differences between President Trump’s and President Biden’s approaches to deportations. Our data reporter Albert Sun describes what we found.
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Buttigieg and Booker Lead Push to Hammer Republicans on Health Care.
The potential 2028 presidential candidates showcased a Democratic midterm strategy that would assail G.O.P. votes in favor of cutting Medicaid and allowing health care subsidies to expire.
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Under Patel, F.B.I. Scours Its Records to Discredit Trump Opponents.
As the F.B.I. has added payback to its portfolio, Republican lawmakers like Senator Charles E. Grassley have emerged as a clearinghouse for leaks and whistle-blowers.
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Trump Backs a Potential Primary Challenger to Bill Cassidy, a G.O.P. Senator.
The president urged Representative Julia Letlow of Louisiana to run against Mr. Cassidy, in a move that is likely to further complicate his relationship with Senate Republicans.
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Virginia’s New Governor Moves Swiftly to Overhaul State University Boards.
Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat, appointed new board members at three state schools, hours after she was sworn in as Virginia’s first female governor.
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These Are the 12 States Vying to Kick Off Democrats’ 2028 Contest.
There were a few surprises, and subtle regional digs, as Democratic state parties angled for early spots on the next presidential primary calendar. The New York Times reviewed their applications.
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Trump Threatens New Tariffs To Force Sale of Greenland.
On Saturday morning, President Trump announced in a social media post his latest strategy to seize control of Greenland: He is slapping new tariffs on a group of European nations until they come to the negotiating table to sell Greenland.
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Trump Announces 10 Percent Tariff on European Countries in Standoff Over Greenland.
The president escalated his drive to take charge of the Danish territory, targeting eight countries with tariffs.
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How the House Slumped to Historic Lows of Productivity in 2025.
Despite holding a governing trifecta, Republicans labored to steer the tightly divided House, with fewer votes and fewer bills that became law than almost any session in the last two decades.
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A Trump Veto Leaves Republicans in Colorado Parched and Bewildered.
The first veto of the president’s second term killed legislation that would have brought clean water to some of the most conservative parts of the state. Residents wonder why.
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After Renee Good Killing, Derisive Term for White Women Spreads on the Far Right.
Vocal Trump supporters are demonizing Renee Good, her partner and their allies, with some even using an acronym: AWFUL, or Affluent White Female Urban Liberal.
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Court Blocks Trump Administration From Freezing Food Stamps in Minnesota.
With tensions high between the White House and the state, the ruling temporarily halted plans to withhold over $129 million in funding.
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Trump Administration Begins Criminal Inquiry Into Minnesota Leaders.
The Justice Department’s investigation is a major escalation in the state-federal battle over the conduct of immigration agents in Minneapolis.
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Trump Announces Largely American Council to Oversee Gaza.
The president also tapped a U.S. general to lead an international peacekeeping force that will be deployed to disarm Hamas and occupy Gaza.
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An A.I. Attack Ad Shows Texas Rivals Dancing the ‘Washington Waltz’
A video from Ken Paxton, a Republican primary challenger to Senator John Cornyn of Texas, depicted A.I.-generated imagery of the senator twirling with Jasmine Crockett, a Democratic Senate candidate.
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ICE Tensions Are Raging. What’s the Political Fallout?
Three reporters discuss the Minneapolis chaos and how it could play a role in the midterms.
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Trump Has Machado’s Nobel Prize, but Neither Got What They Really Wanted.
President Trump has María Corina Machado’s medal, but he is not recognized as the prize laureate. Ms. Machado did not win Mr. Trump’s endorsement to become Venezuela’s president.
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F.A.A. Urges ‘Caution’ Over Oceans in Latin America, Warning of Military Activity.
The Federal Aviation Administration released seven advisories warning pilots to stay away from parts of the Pacific Ocean near Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador and Panama.
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Supreme Court to Hear Challenge to Warrants for Phone Location Data.
The case involves a challenge to so-called geofence warrants, which permit law enforcement officials to sweep up location data of people near crime scenes.
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Judge Recommends U.S. Issue Visa to Student Who Was Deported in Error.
A federal prosecutor apologized this week, saying an ICE officer made a “mistake” in deporting Any Lucia López Belloza, a college freshman in Massachusetts, to Honduras.
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Trump Appoints Allies to Review His Ballroom Plans.
A federal judge has allowed the ballroom project to proceed after the Trump administration pledged to undergo a review by the Commission of Fine Arts.
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Leadership Dispute Said to Spur Abrupt Exit at the National Constitution Center.
The congressionally chartered museum and national town hall has not explained the sudden departure of Jeffrey Rosen as its president and chief executive.
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Mexico’s president defends her nation’s antidrug efforts following U.S. criticism.
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Trump Sets Fraudster Free From Prison for a Second Time.
The president issued a raft of clemency grants this week, including pardoning a woman he had given relief to once before and a man whose daughter had donated millions to a Trump super PAC.
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U.S. Lawmakers Meet With Danish Prime Minister on Greenland.
Seeking to calm tensions, Republicans and Democrats affirmed that they supported Denmark’s control of Greenland as President Trump vowed to buy it or take it over.
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Why Is It So Hard to Set a 9/11 Trial Date? Here’s What to Know.
Prosecutors want jury selection to start in January 2027. That would be a quarter century after the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people.
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Powell, an Unlikely Foil, Takes On Trump.
Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, this week tapped a groundswell of support that has been years in the making.
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Trump Store to Close as Sales Falter, With No Election Battles Ahead.
The shop in suburban Philadelphia had been a gathering spot for the MAGA crowd to rally during the 2024 campaign.
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C.I.A. Director Meets With Venezuela’s Interim President in Caracas.
The high-profile visit, which could be seen as snubbing the opposition, comes nearly two weeks after the U.S. military seized President Nicolás Maduro in a raid.
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U.S. Says It Erred in Deporting Student Traveling for Thanksgiving.
The Trump administration acknowledged it mistakenly deported a college student to Honduras despite a court order barring the removal. But the government has not moved to drop the case.
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Former Senator Kyrsten Sinema Accused of Affair With Member of Security Team.
In a lawsuit, the ex-wife of Ms. Sinema’s onetime staff member accused her of showering him with gifts and breaking up their marriage.
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What Did the White House and Denmark Agree to on Greenland? Depends Whom You Ask.
The White House and Denmark contradicted each other in public about what they had agreed to this week as President Trump continued to demand U.S. ownership of Greenland.
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Democratic Lawmakers Say They Face New Round of Federal Inquiries.
By Wednesday, at least five Democratic lawmakers said they received new inquiries from federal prosecutors regarding a video they published in November. In the video, they urged military service members not to follow illegal orders.
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Judge Proposes Restricting Deportation of Scores of Noncitizen Academics.
In a case over the First Amendment rights of noncitizen scholars, a federal judge proposed extending protections to members of two academic groups behind a lawsuit.
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N.S.A. Nominee Promises to Protect Elections From Foreign Interference.
President Trump fired the National Security Agency’s chief back in April and has weakened cyberattack protections.
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Trump Threatens to Invoke the Insurrection Act and Send Troops to Minnesota.
The law, which was last invoked in 1992, could allow President Trump to deploy the military inside the United States. Doing so would be a major escalation.
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U.S. Forces Seize Sixth Oil Tanker Linked to Venezuela.
The Coast Guard boarded and seized the Russian-flagged tanker, originally named Veronica, in a pre-dawn operation in the Caribbean Sea.
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Pentagon Will ‘Refocus’ Military Publication Stars and Stripes.
The agency’s chief spokesman outlined plans to intervene in the previously independent newspaper’s coverage.
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Arkansas Rescinds Choice of Law School Dean Over Transgender Stance.
The University of Arkansas withdrew a job offer to a legal scholar after state officials learned that she had signed a legal brief concerning transgender athletes, lawmakers said.
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Did a Supreme Court Loss Embolden Trump on the Insurrection Act?
In refusing to let the president deploy National Guard troops in Illinois under an obscure law, the justices may have made him more apt to invoke greater powers.
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ICE’s No. 2 Official Leaves to Run for the House in Ohio.
Madison Sheahan, a top enforcer of President Trump’s immigration crackdown, said she would step down to challenge Representative Marcy Kaptur, a Democrat.
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Trump Releases Health Plan but It’s Short on Specifics.
The long-awaited plan would leave much to Congress and calls for payments to health savings accounts rather than insurance subsidies, among other broad proposals.
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Israel and Arab Nations Ask Trump to Refrain From Attacking Iran.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel asked the president to postpone any planned attack. Israeli and Arab officials fear Iran could retaliate by striking their countries.
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Under Trump, a Shift Toward ‘Absolute Immunity’ for ICE.
Since the fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis, administration officials have defended the use of deadly force, which agency guidelines say should be a last resort.
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Abolish ICE? It’s a Slogan Some Democratic Critics of ICE Would Abolish.
As Democrats grow more alarmed about the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration raids in American cities, some worry that calls to eliminate the agency will distract from efforts to rein it in.
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Cyberattack in Venezuela Demonstrated Precision of U.S. Capabilities.
Senators are expected to ask Lt. Gen. Joshua M. Rudd, President Trump’s nominee to lead the U.S. Cyber Command, about the mission in Caracas.
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Leading Prediction Firms Share a Commonality: Donald Trump Jr.
Traders in companies with ties to the president’s eldest son can bet on the outcome of events the president affects.
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Judge to Weigh Next Steps in Student Activist Deportations Case.
The hearing on Thursday followed up on the court’s sweeping finding in September that noncitizen students had the same free speech rights as citizens.
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3 More Lawmakers in Video Say Federal Prosecutors Are Investigating Them.
The lawmakers, all Democrats who urged military service members not to follow illegal orders, said prosecutors had contacted them. But it is unclear what crime they might have committed.
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After Danish and U.S. Officials Meet on Greenland, Trump Remains Unmoved.
Denmark’s foreign minister left the White House complex saying that his country had a “fundamental disagreement” with President Trump, as several NATO countries sent troops to Greenland.
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What Voters Told Democrats About ICE, Costs and Which Party Is ‘Judgy’
In focus groups, swing voters gave Democratic politicians some tough feedback on the party.
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Congress Is Spurning Many of Trump’s Proposed Spending Cuts.
Months after the partisan clash that led to the longest shutdown in history, lawmakers have agreed on spending bills that look far different from what the president wanted.
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Fine Arts Panel Postpones Review of Trump’s Ballroom.
The Trump administration has been under pressure from preservationists to submit the ballroom project for a formal review.
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Trump Administration to Halt Immigrant Visa Processing for 75 Countries.
Federal officials said the move was meant to discourage immigration by people who they deemed likely to rely on public benefits.
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Federal Judges Uphold California’s New Congressional Maps.
A panel in Los Angeles sided with Gov. Gavin Newsom in a decision that will help Democrats counter Republican gerrymandering in Texas. Republicans are expected to appeal.
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Judge Rejects Effort to Return Man Accused in 9/11 Plot to Guantánamo Trial.
The case of Ramzi bin al-Shibh was severed in 2023 after a military medical panel found him incompetent to help with his defense.
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Republicans Move to Block Effort to Check Trump’s Power in Venezuela.
G.O.P. leaders are pressuring fellow senators who supported the measure to change their vote on the bill to block President Trump’s military action in Venezuela without Congress’s consent.
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Republicans Advance Stock-Trading Bill With Limited Restrictions.
The bill would allow lawmakers to keep their existing stock and continue to sell it if they provide seven to 14 days of notice. Democrats called it a “gift to insider traders.”
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Supreme Court Sides With Conservative Congressman in Illinois Election Rules Challenge.
The question in the case was not a mail-in ballot rule itself but whether political candidates have the right to challenge the rules governing the vote count in their election.
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Denmark Reinforces Its Military Presence in Greenland.
The Danes say the deployment of aircraft, ships and soldiers is part of an ongoing effort to better protect the island and the Arctic.
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U.S. Weighs Expanding Private Companies’ Role in Cyberwarfare.
The proposal raises a host of questions about the legality and practicality of bolstering the involvement of the private sector in offensive cyberoperations.
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U.S. Moves Some Personnel From Key Air Base as Tensions Mount With Iran.
Nonessential personnel are being removed from Udeid Air Base in Qatar, the main U.S. air operations hub in the region, as President Trump weighs a military response to Iran’s crackdown on protests.
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Supreme Court Backs Police Entry Without Warrant in Emergencies.
Montana officials defended the actions of law enforcement officers who did not have a warrant when they responded to a possibly suicidal Army veteran.
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F.B.I. Searches Home of Washington Post Journalist for Classified Material.
It is exceedingly rare, even in investigations of classified disclosures, for federal agents to search a reporter’s home.
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A Top Fed Official Says the Trump Administration’s Threats Are ‘About Monetary Policy’
Neel T. Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, defended Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, in an interview. He also said interest rates should be held steady this month.
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Chuck Schumer Calls His Shot.
After securing strong recruits on a tough Senate map, the Democratic leader is not only predicting an upset 2026 victory, but also naming the states he thinks his party can flip.
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Trump Credits ‘Mister Tariff’ for the Country’s Strength. Economists Beg to Differ.
Many indicators appear to suggest that the United States is growing despite tariffs, not because of them.
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An Emboldened Trump Places His Bets From Caracas to Tehran.
President Trump has left himself plenty of room for maximal intervention. But there are a host of potential wild cards, each with risks for the president.
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Initial Review Finds No Widespread Illegal Voting by Migrants, Puncturing a Trump Claim.
Republican election officials welcome the review, which relies on a federal verification tool, but they say they have not discovered a major problem when it comes to noncitizen voters.
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Trump Makes Obscene Gesture at Heckler in Ford Factory Tour.
A White House spokesman said the president “gave an appropriate and unambiguous response.”
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The Minneapolis Mayor Who Cursed Out ICE Is No Stranger to Crisis.
Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, has clashed with his party’s activist wing. His response to ICE has won him new respect at home and new foes in Washington.
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Senator Says Prosecutors Are Investigating Her After Video About Illegal Orders.
It is unclear what possible crime might involve Senator Elissa Slotkin, a Democrat, who has warned in dire terms about the dissolution of American democracy.
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Supreme Court May Allow States to Bar Transgender Athletes.
The Supreme Court heard two cases from West Virginia and Idaho on Tuesday. Both concerned barring the participation of transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s sports teams.
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Trump Supports the Protesters, Except Those Protesting Him.
The split-screen television images of mass demonstrations in Minneapolis and Tehran have highlighted the president’s disparate views of democracy and popular dissent.
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Trump nominates a company chief and Republican donor, David MacNeil, to the F.T.C.
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Justice Dept. Memo Said Trump Could Send Troops Into Venezuela on His Own.
The Office of Legal Counsel also invoked a claim about Venezuela’s “Cartel de los Soles” that department prosecutors have abandoned.
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In a Risky Gambit, Trump Tries Brute Force to Lower Prices.
To assuage cost-weary voters and combat inflation, the president has resorted to a mix of threats and punishments, targeting companies and policymakers alike.
-
Blowback Builds Over Criminal Investigation of Powell.
Trump allies fear that the inquiry into the Fed chair could complicate the process of replacing him this year.
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Trump Loyalist Asserts She Can Keep U.S. Attorney Title.
In an aggressively worded filing, Lindsey Halligan accused a judge of having a fundamental misunderstanding of the order that determined she had been unlawfully appointed.
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How a G.O.P. Senator Quietly Became a Best-Selling Author.
Senator John Kennedy, a garrulous rank-and-file Republican from Louisiana, has struck a nerve with a new book that provides an insider account of Congress and its dysfunction.
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Trump Administration Will End Deportation Protections for Somalis.
The temporary protections, which are meant to help migrants who cannot safely return to their countries, are expected to expire for Somalis on March 17.
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A.D.F., a Christian conservative legal organization, is assisting Idaho and West Virginia.
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Justice Kavanaugh May Bring a Coach’s Perspective to the Case.
The justice, a sports buff, has coached girls’ basketball teams for many years and has often reflected on the role such mentoring can play.
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Before White House Meeting, Greenland’s Leader Says Island Would Choose Denmark Over U.S.
Greenland’s leader said that, if given the choice between the United States and Denmark, the Greenlanders would rather stick with the Danes.
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Greenland’s leader says before White House meeting that the island would choose Denmark over the U.S.
Greenland’s leader said that, if given the choice between the United States and Denmark, the Greenlanders would rather stick with the Danes.
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Organizing bodies have grappled with gender issues, pleasing few.
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Appeals courts have split over bathroom bans for transgender youths.
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Number of Trans Athletes Affected by Bans Is Low, but the Debate Is Broad.
The people who support barring trans girls from girls’ sports say the debate affects not just transgender athletes but whole teams and sports.
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Researchers Still Debating Whether Trans Athletes Have an Edge.
The issue is complex: Individual sports rely on different physical and physiological attributes, and no two gender transitions are identical.
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Hints Suggest How 2 Key Justices May View Trans Athletes in Women’s Sports.
There are some indications from questions at arguments and past writing how Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh view the issue before the court.
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2 Students Behind Challenges to Trans Athlete Laws.
One sued to join her middle school girls’ cross-country team in West Virginia and the other to join the women’s track and cross-country teams at her university in Idaho.
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27 States Restrict Trans Participation in School Sports.
Over the past six years, more than two dozen state legislatures have enacted laws on transgender athletes. Idaho, whose statute is being challenged before the Supreme Court, was the first in 2020.
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Here are the lawyers arguing the cases.
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Read the Clintons’ Legal Letter to Comer.
Lawyers for Bill and Hillary Clinton wrote a letter to Representative James R. Comer of Kentucky, the Republican chairman of the Oversight Committee, on why the couple would not testify in the House’s Jeffrey Epstein investigation.
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Facing Contempt Threat, Clintons Refuse to Testify in Epstein Inquiry.
The couple denounced the efforts by Representative James R. Comer, the chairman of the Oversight Committee, to force them to appear, setting the stage for a legal battle.
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Barring transgender women from women’s sports has been a prominent goal for Republicans.
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Here’s How the Supreme Court Ruled in Cases Involving Transgender Rights.
Among them: The justices have allowed the administration to stop issuing passports with gender identity markings selected by applicants.
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Supreme Court’s Ruling on Trans Athletes Could Apply to 2 or Many.
The parties disagree about whether the court’s ruling should be categorical or turn on the challengers’ individual circumstances.
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Here’s the latest on the argument.
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Why This 15-Year-Old’s Case Is at the Supreme Court.
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court will hear two cases involving transgender athletes and their participation in women’s sports. One of the plaintiffs, the 15-year-old track athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson, spoke to the reporter Ann E. Marimow ahead of the hearing.
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Supreme Court to Hear Challenges to State Bans on Transgender Athletes.
The outcome of a pair of cases on Tuesday could affect laws in 27 states that prohibit transgender girls from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams.
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Facing Political Pressure, Trump Seeks Answer to Rising Housing Costs.
White House officials have explored a vast array of ideas as the president looks to unfurl a housing affordability plan at an economic conference this month.
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The House Republican Majority Is Down to Almost Nothing.
Unexpected vacancies have whittled the G.O.P.’s edge to just a couple of votes, leaving Speaker Mike Johnson with almost no margin for leading the chamber.
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The Quest to ‘Make America Fertile Again’ Stalls Under Trump.
Administration officials have been urging Americans to get married and procreate, but some conservatives are frustrated by a lack of action.
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Minnesota and Illinois Sue Trump Administration Over ICE Deployments.
Minnesota and Illinois filed federal lawsuits against the Trump administration, claiming that the deployment of immigration agents to the Minneapolis and Chicago areas violated states’ rights.
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Trump’s Plans for Venezuelan Oil Run Headlong Into Reality.
President Trump’s fixation on Venezuela’s oil raises the question of how much “energy dominance” is really worth nowadays.
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Trump Has Another Justification for the Shooting of Renee Good: Disrespect.
President Trump suggested that Renee Good’s “highly disrespectful” attitude toward law enforcement played a role in her fatal shooting by an ICE agent.
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F.B.I. Inquiry Into ICE Shooting Is Examining Victim’s Possible Ties to Activist Groups.
Former department officials warned that such a broad inquiry raised the specter that forms of political protests could be criminalized.
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Trump Officials Are Sending 1,000 More Immigration Officers to Minnesota.
The Customs and Border Protection officers are joining 2,000 other officers and agents at the Department of Homeland Security who have recently been deployed to the Minneapolis region.
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U.S. Attacked Boat With Aircraft That Looked Like a Civilian Plane.
Even accepting the Trump administration’s claim that there is an armed conflict with suspected drug runners, the laws of war bar “perfidy.”
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Trump’s Feel-My-Pain Economic Message.
The president appears skeptical about Americans’ concerns. How will voters respond?
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Trump Explores Diplomacy With Iran While Weighing Strikes, Officials Say.
Abbas Araghchi, the foreign minister of Iran, said his government was ready to negotiate with the United States. Iranian security forces are cracking down on protests.
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Kelly Sues Pentagon Over Threats of Punishment From Hegseth.
Senator Mark Kelly, Democrat of Arizona, asked a federal judge to block the Trump administration from disciplining him for a video warning about illegal military orders.
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What to Know About the Criminal Investigation of the Fed Chair.
The Justice Department’s probe into whether Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, lied about renovations to the central bank’s headquarters has raised alarms.
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With Democrats at a Crossroads, Elizabeth Warren Urges a Left Turn.
The Massachusetts senator signaled alarm about her party’s movement toward the center, warning in a speech that Democrats should not cozy up to the wealthy and the powerful.
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Justice Department Charges the Man Shot by Agents in Portland, Ore.
Last week’s shooting of two Venezuelan immigrants put the city on edge. Federal officials said the man who was shot had repeatedly backed into a Border Patrol car.
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Federal Prosecutor Is Fired Amid Further Turmoil in Comey Case.
Robert K. McBride had been serving as the top deputy to Lindsey Halligan, who has continued to act as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.
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Supreme Court Grapples With Louisiana Coastal Lawsuits Against Oil Companies.
The justices heard arguments over whether oil companies sued by Louisiana could move the cases from state to federal court, a venue thought to be friendlier to corporate interests.
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Criminal Inquiry of Powell Draws Backlash From Some Republicans.
Three Republican senators offered a rare rebuke of the Trump administration’s tactics, criticizing an investigation of the Federal Reserve chair.
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Inside Democrats’ Brewing Debate Over Which States Should Vote First in 2028.
Does Iowa deserve another shot? Is South Carolina too red? New Hampshire too white? Nevada too far-flung? Democrats are starting their calendar from scratch, and there’s a lot to consider.
World
Africa
Americas
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Splits Emerge Among Venezuelans as Revolutionary Dream Fades.
Supporters of former president Hugo Chávez, the anti-American socialist, are struggling to come to terms with their government’s pact with Washington.
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What to Know About Hezbollah’s Ties to Venezuela.
U.S. authorities have accused Hezbollah of complicity in drug trafficking and money laundering schemes in Venezuela.
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Guatemala Declares State of Emergency to Address Gang Violence.
The country has seen a surge of unrest in recent days, including uprisings at prisons and the killing of police officers, which the authorities have blamed on gangs.
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‘Come Help Us’: Wildfires Grip Parts of Chile, Killing at Least 16.
One mayor pleaded with the national government for help as flames destroyed entire neighborhoods in the southern region of Biobío.
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Why It’s Hard to Run Venezuela.
Venezuela sprawls over terrain twice the size of California, with vast tracts of treacherous jungles, steep mountains and cities filled with guns.
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The Biggest Challenge in Venezuela? Forget the Oil, It’s Stocking the Fridge.
Economic instability in Venezuela after the U.S. raid to capture its president is deepening inflation and rattling the currency, sending grocery bills soaring for millions of people.
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Can Cuba Survive Without Venezuela’s Oil?
President Trump stopped Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba, and experts say disaster looms. Oil fuels its electric grid and without alternative supplies the country will plunge into extended darkness.
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After Trump Call, Colombia Turns Up Heat on Rebels Accused of Drug Trafficking.
President Gustavo Petro is taking a harder line against the National Liberation Army, or ELN, a leftist revolutionary group that experts call a powerful drug trafficker in Colombia and Venezuela.
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A Tale of Two Meetings: Trump Chooses Oil Over Democracy.
Two conversations this week confirmed that President Trump backs the remnants of Nicolás Maduro’s regime over the Venezuelan opposition seeking to hold elections.
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Machado Offers Trump Her Nobel Peace Prize Medal.
During a meeting in the White House on Thursday, Venezuela’s opposition leader, María Corina Machado, presented her medal to President Trump.
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Venezuela’s Interim Leader Balances Maduro’s Script With Trump’s Demands.
In her State of the Union address, Delcy Rodríguez echoed her predecessors’ fiery rhetoric but tried to hew to President Trump’s agenda.
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The Nobel Medal Has Been Sold Before for Millions of Dollars.
The Nobel Committee has said the prize cannot be transferred, but it has been sold in a few auctions over the award’s history.
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Remains of 32 Cubans Killed in U.S. Strikes in Venezuela Are Returned.
State-run television aired a ceremony for the remains of 32 Cuban citizens killed in the U.S. strikes in Venezuela arriving in Havana. The deceased were part of the security detail of Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s ousted president.
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Cuba Receives Remains of 32 Citizens Killed in U.S. Strikes in Venezuela.
The Cubans had served as part of the security detail of Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s ousted president.
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The U.S. Is Pressing Mexico to Allow U.S. Forces to Fight Cartels.
The United States is escalating pressure on the Mexican government to permit the U.S. military to target fentanyl labs, according to American officials.
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Nobel Committee Takes Heat at Home as Machado Courts Trump.
The Venezuelan opposition leader’s attempts to share her award with the U.S. president have shaken some Norwegians’ faith in their signature soft-power tool.
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Maduro’s Enforcer Faces an Uneasy Transition, and a Bounty on His Head.
Diosdado Cabello, Venezuela’s interior minister, is accused by U.S. prosecutors of drug trafficking and is linked to repression at home, yet remains a powerful figure.
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Son of ‘Goodbye Horses’ Singer Among Americans Freed in Venezuela.
James Luckey-Lange, 28, was released this week with several other U.S. citizens from the country’s notorious prison system after going missing in December, his family said.
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U.S. Races to Sell Venezuelan Oil, Transforming Ties With Former Foe.
U.S. officials brokered the sale of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Venezuelan oil to stabilize the country’s economy after capturing its president.
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Quebec’s Unpopular Leader to Resign Ahead of Elections.
Premier François Legault became Canada’s most popular provincial leader during the pandemic thanks to his reassuring, avuncular persona. But missteps sank his hopes for a third term.
-
Venezuelan Envoy to Make First Washington Trip in Years Amid Thaw.
Félix Plasencia, an envoy of the interim government, will travel to the United States on the day the opposition leader María Corina Machado is to meet President Trump.
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‘We’re Not Stupid’: What Greenlanders Would Say to Trump.
A visit to Greenland reveals a swirl of feelings as people nervously await talks with the Trump administration about the island’s future.
-
Venezuela Announced the Release of Political Prisoners. Families Are Still Waiting.
Hundreds of families are hoping their loved ones will be freed by the Venezuelan government, which has said little about who would be released or when.
-
Venezuela Frees Several Americans From Prison, U.S. Says.
They were the first U.S. citizens released after the U.S. military captured Nicolás Maduro and flew him to the United States to stand trial on drug and other charges.
-
Hints of Political Amnesty Stoke Hope and Frustration in Venezuela.
Venezuela’s new leaders and President Trump have alluded to a major release of political prisoners, but the liberations have been slow to come.
Asia Pacific
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Japan’s Leader Calls for Snap Election in Bid to Expand Power.
Sanae Takaichi, the first woman to be Japan’s prime minister, is hoping to seize on her popularity by calling a parliamentary election next month.
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Why Are New Zealanders Moving to Australia? More Money, Better Vibes.
More than 1 percent of New Zealand’s population left over the year ending in October. Many of the migrants were chasing salaries and opportunities in neighboring Australia.
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Can Vietnam’s Communist Party Supercharge Its Economy With Private Enterprise?
One of Asia’s most dynamic nations is weighing how to balance government control with raising per capita G.D.P. by about 70 percent in five years.
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A Refuge for Afghan Music Is at Risk of Falling Silent.
Peshawar is a haven for Afghan artists who fled from the Taliban, which had banned music. A new policy of deportations by Pakistan threatens this community of exiles.
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Thousands of Chinese Fishing Boats Quietly Form Vast Sea Barriers.
China is practicing vast maneuvers that could be used to disrupt U.S. naval movement, a New York Times analysis of ship data reveals.
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Canada and China Will Lower Some Tariffs in ‘New Strategic Partnership’
Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada announced that Canada would slash tariffs on some Chinese electric vehicles and that, in return, China would reduce tariffs on Canadian canola products.
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Death Toll Rises to 28 After Landfill Collapse in the Philippines.
Rescuers in Cebu City have recovered 28 bodies from a garbage mound that collapsed last week. The search continues for eight missing people.
-
Meloni and Takaichi, Right-Wing Trailblazers, Become Fast Friends.
At a meeting in Tokyo, Prime Ministers Giorgia Meloni of Italy and Sanae Takaichi of Japan bonded over being conservative women at the pinnacle of power.
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Ex-South Korean Leader Gets Prison Term in First Ruling Over Martial Law.
A court handed down five years in prison to former President Yoon Suk Yeol, who is facing multiple trials stemming from his short-lived imposition of martial law.
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A Crane Collapse in Thailand Killed 2, One Day After a Similar Tragedy.
A crane collapsed on an expressway on the outskirts of Bangkok on Thursday, killing at least two people, an official said. It was the second fatal accident involving cranes in the country in two days.
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Crane Collapses on Expressway Outside Bangkok, Killing at Least 2.
The deadly episode came a day after a crane fell on a moving train in northeastern Thailand, killing at least 32 people.
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Drum Diplomacy: Leaders of Japan and South Korea in Sync to K-pop.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan and President Lee Jae Myung of South Korea played along to BTS and “KPop Demon Hunters,” in a display meant to show warming ties.
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Japan and South Korea Reinforce Ties With a K-Pop Jam Session.
President Lee Jae Myung of South Korea and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan jammed to K-pop during a summit to reaffirm their relationship amid growing political and economic uncertainty.
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A New Video Game Traps Players in an Online Scam Center.
“Blood Money: Lethal Eden” taps into a rising anxiety in China by simulating the experiences of people trafficked for the scam industry.
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Construction Crane Falls on Train in Thailand.
A crane fell on an express train carrying about 200 passengers in northeastern Thailand. Officials said at least 22 people were killed and dozens were injured.
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Crane Falls on Passenger Train in Thailand, Killing at Least 22.
The railway authorities said there were almost 200 people on the train when the accident happened in Nakhon Ratchasima Province, northeast of Bangkok. Dozens were injured.
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Beijing Won Its War for Blue Skies, but Villagers Are Paying the Price.
China banned the burning of coal for heat around Beijing, but natural gas subsidies have run out, leaving many villagers vulnerable in dangerously cold weather.
-
David Webb, Investor Who Took on Hong Kong Tycoons, Dies at 60.
From his internet platform, he became a tenacious watchdog fighting financial regulators for minority shareholders and exposing shady business dealings.
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Prosecutors Demand Death Penalty for South Korea’s Ousted Leader.
Former President Yoon Suk Yeol faces an insurrection charge after his failed attempt to put his country under martial law in 2024.
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At This Office Park, Scamming the World Was the Business.
Times journalists got a rare look inside one of the compounds where the online fraud industry makes its billions. Inspirational slogans (“Keep going”) were just the start.
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Inside the Scam Complex’s Detailed Playbook.
The scammers at a vast office park in Myanmar wielded deepfake technology, doctored videos and pinpoint conversational ploys that differed by the ages and nationalities of their victims.
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A Times Reporter Goes Inside a Cyberscam Center in a War Zone.
Hannah Beech, a New York Times reporter, gained rare access to one of Myanmar’s notorious cyberscam centers to see how Chinese criminals have been targeting Americans in the middle of a war zone.
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China’s ‘Dr. Frankenstein’ Thinks Time Is on His Side.
He Jiankui spent three years in prison after creating gene-edited babies. Now back at work, he sees a greater opening for researchers who push boundaries.
-
World Court Hears Groundbreaking Genocide Case Against Myanmar.
The case was brought to the World Court by a country not directly affected by the alleged genocide of the Rohingya, a precedent for similar claims against other countries, including Israel.
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Trump’s India Envoy Offers Hope Amid a Strained Relationship.
Sergio Gor, a confidant of the U.S. president, took up his post as ambassador in New Delhi with ties between the countries at their lowest ebb in decades.
Australia
Canada
Europe
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Denied Peace Prize, Trump Tells Norway He’ll Push for Greenland.
In a text message, President Trump told Norway’s prime minister he no longer felt obliged to “think purely of Peace” and that the world would not be secure until America controlled the island.
-
‘Like an Earthquake’: Survivors Describe High-Speed Train Crash in Spain.
Photographs show a tangled mess of metal, wires and broken glass at the scene of the crash, which killed at least 39 people.
-
Syria, in Ruins.
A year after the dictator fell, Syrians are returning to a country with no clear plan for rebuilding.
-
At the Center of Trump’s Vision for Rebuilding Ukraine: BlackRock.
The world’s largest asset manager has been enlisted to help build Ukraine’s recovery plan. Some fear it is part of a Trump administration effort to steer the effort toward American business interests.
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Much of Spain’s High-Speed Rail Network Will Be Closed on Monday.
The closures were announced after a high-speed train derailed and smashed into another high-speed train, killing at least 39 people and injuring dozens.
-
What to Know About Prince Harry’s Case Against Daily Mail Publisher.
A trial is set to begin on Monday in Harry’s case accusing Associated Newspapers of phone hacking and other unlawful activities. Other claimants include Elton John and Liz Hurley.
-
What We Know About the Deadly High-Speed Train Crash in Spain.
The collision, caused by the derailment of one of the trains, was the deadliest in Spain since at least 2013.
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Deadly Train Crash in Spain.
Emergency responders worked to evacuate survivors from the wreckage of a deadly crash between two high-speed trains that derailed in Adamuz, Spain, on Sunday.
-
European Union Officials Lean Toward Negotiating, Not Retaliating, Over Trump Tariff Threat.
European Union ambassadors held an emergency meeting on Sunday, and leaders from across the 27-nation bloc will meet in Brussels later this week.
-
Trains Collide After Derailment in Spain, Killing at Least 21.
A high-speed train smashed into another train after derailing in the southern province of Córdoba, officials said. The cause of the accident was not immediately clear.
-
Bleak Times in Copenhagen: Danes Feel Betrayed and Bewildered by Trump.
The American president’s vow to get Greenland, the semiautonomous Danish territory, has thrown the tiny, pro-American Nordic nation into crisis.
-
After Trump Reignites a Trade War Over Greenland, Europe Weighs Going All-Out.
Europe’s dependence on the United States for NATO security limits its options. Its strongest response could be retaliating with its own trade “bazooka.”
-
Avalanches Across Austrian Alps Kill 8 Skiers in One Day.
Skiers have also died from avalanche-related accidents in the Swiss and French Alps over the past week.
-
Why London’s Chimney Sweeps Are Enjoying a Resurgence.
The centuries-old trade is enjoying something of a revival, partly driven by rising energy costs. Today’s sweeps use new tools and technology.
-
‘Yankee, Go Home’: Greenlanders Protest Trump’s Takeover Plans.
Protests erupted in several Greenlandic cites and in Denmark as President Trump intensified his efforts to take control of the Arctic island.
-
Syria Advances on Kurdish-Held Areas as Washington Urges Restraint.
Government troops drew closer to Raqqa, the largest city overseen by the Kurds, raising U.S. concerns about the renewal of a wider conflict in the region.
-
In Spain’s ‘Little Caracas,’ Venezuelan Exiles Are Still Waiting.
Spain is home to the biggest collection of Venezuelan emigrants outside the Americas. Many cheered the capture of Nicolás Maduro, but are now adapting to the fact that his allies remain in charge.
-
Is the Russian Military Adapting Effectively to the Drone Age?
Current and former commanders, analysts and military bloggers are having a surprisingly open debate about whether drones have made Russia’s longstanding approach to battle obsolete.
-
Russian Strikes Force Kyiv Schools to Close Amid Rolling Blackouts.
Russia has targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure in past winters, but this year intensified its attacks as temperatures in Ukraine plunged well below freezing.
-
How Greenland Is Reacting to Trump’s Threats.
Our reporter Jeffrey Gettleman is on the ground in Greenland, seeing how people have reacted to Trump’s desire to take it over. He and our senior writer Katrin Bennhold discuss what Greenland means to the United States, Denmark and Greenlanders.
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How Italy Is Racing to Finish an Ice Rink Before the Olympics.
With less than a month until the Winter Games in northern Italy, builders have yet to complete a major arena.
-
Antiwar Russians in Europe Learn That They Must Watch Their Words.
A backlash over a rant against Ukrainian officials has raised questions about Eastern Europe’s welcome of Russian dissidents.
-
Milan Court Closes Fraud Case Against Italian Influencer Chiara Ferragni.
A judge dropped the case against Ms. Ferragni, who had been embroiled in a scandal over sales of a limited edition Christmas cake marketed as supporting cancer treatment.
-
Citing Secret Plot, U.K. Conservative Party Fires a Senior Lawmaker.
The leader of Britain’s Conservatives, Kemi Badenoch, said she had ousted Robert Jenrick for “plotting in secret” to defect from and damage the party.
-
After an Inconclusive Meeting, Greenlanders Ask: Now What?
A high-powered meeting in Washington on Wednesday ended in an impasse, leaving Greenlanders fearful of what comes next.
-
Kyiv’s Cruelest Winter: Russia Knocks Out the Heat in the Bitter Cold.
The Kremlin has tried for years to freeze Ukraine into submission. This winter, its attacks have been the most devastating ever.
-
Denmark Has ‘Fundamental Disagreement’ With U.S. Over Greenland.
On Wednesday, Denmark and Greenland’s foreign ministers met with the Trump administration. President Trump urged the United States needs Greenland for national security purposes but both foreign officials argued Greenland is not up for sale.
-
U.K. Home Secretary Presses Police Chief to Resign Over Israeli Soccer Fan Ban.
An independent report said Wednesday that the West Midlands Police overstated the threat posed by Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters before a match last year in Birmingham.
-
U.K. Retreats on Plan to Require ‘BritCard’ ID for Workers.
Workers will be able to use a variety of digital IDs to prove their right to work in Britain, the government said Wednesday, diluting a plan it announced last year.
-
Why Greenland Matters for a Warming World.
The fate of the world’s largest island has outsize importance for billions of people on the planet, because as the climate warms, Greenland is losing ice. That has consequences.
-
Greenland’s Leader Says His Nation Wants to Remain Part of Denmark.
Before a meeting on Wednesday with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Greenland’s prime minister said that his nation intended to remain part of Denmark.
-
Trump’s Threats to Greenland Raise Serious Questions for NATO.
The treaty that created NATO did not contemplate an attack by one ally on another. A seizure of Greenland by President Trump would test the endurance of the mutual-defense pact.
-
Tensions Are High as Vance and Rubio Prepare to Meet Danish and Greenlandic Officials.
Top officials from the United States, Denmark and Greenland will meet at the White House for the first time since President Trump said he wanted to own Greenland.
-
Spanish Prosecutors Investigate Sexual Assault Claims Against Julio Iglesias.
Prosecutors said two former employees of Mr. Iglesias, a renowned Spanish singer, had accused him of abuse. His representatives did not respond to requests for comment.
-
Marine Le Pen’s Appeal to Overturn Embezzlement Conviction Begins.
Marine Le Pen, the French far-right leader, began her appeal trial aimed at overturning a ruling by a criminal court in 2025 that convicted her of embezzlement and barred her from running for public office for five years.
-
Trump Says London is Unsafe. Its Murder Rate Just Hit a Historic Low.
The city’s homicide rate is lower than that of New York, Paris or Toronto, contradicting a narrative promoted by President Trump and others on the populist right.
-
Marine Le Pen Is Appealing a Conviction That Bars Her From Office. Here’s What to Know.
Ms. Le Pen, whose far-right party leads polls in France, was convicted last year of embezzlement. The outcome of her appeal, which started on Tuesday, will determine if she can run for president next year.
-
Greenland Would Be the Largest U.S. Land Acquisition, if Trump Got His Way.
Denmark does not want to sell its territory. But for a real estate mogul turned president, the world’s largest island may be irresistible.
-
Archaeologists Find Large Roman Villa Under Deer Park in Wales.
The unexpected discovery of a well-preserved and fortified villa in Margam Park in South Wales sheds new light on the Roman occupation there, an expert said.
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Owner of Swiss Bar Where 40 Died Is Ordered to Jail as a Flight Risk.
Jacques Moretti has been placed in pretrial detention for at least three months. He and his wife, Jessica Moretti, are under investigation over possible negligence.
-
Britain Investigates Elon Musk’s X Over Grok’s Sexualized A.I. Images.
A British regulator said it had started a formal investigation into Mr. Musk’s chatbot over the spread of illegal images.
Middle East
-
Syrian Government and Kurdish-Led Force Agree to Merge After Clashes.
The new deal also calls for a cease-fire. Government forces have taken strategic assets from the militia in recent days, weakening the force.
-
$1 Billion in Cash Buys a Permanent Seat on Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’
The board was originally conceived to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza, but its charter does not mention the Palestinian enclave, suggesting a possibly broader mandate.
-
The Dark History of France’s Embassy in Iraq Goes on Trial in Paris.
A Jewish family that fled Iraq generations ago rented its home to France for use as an embassy, but Paris long ago stopped paying it rent, after Iraq stripped Jews of property.
-
World Leaders Consider Joining Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ for Gaza.
Argentina, Canada, Egypt and Turkey say they are among the countries that have been invited to join.
-
Iran’s Supreme Leader, Unbending Over Time.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has built his 37-year rule on uncompromising repression. His answer to the current protests is no different.
-
Inside the Doctors Without Borders Clinics That Israel Is Closing in Gaza.
The aid group has refused to comply with new Israeli rules restricting speech and demanding information on staff. Patients are stunned. “I need this place,” says one.
-
Gabriel Barkay, 81, Dies; His Discoveries Revised Biblical History.
One of Israel’s leading archaeologists, he found evidence that the writing of the Old Testament likely began much earlier than historians had thought.
-
Syria’s President Affirms Kurds’ Rights, in Overture to the Minority.
President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s announcement comes after days of deadly clashes between government and Kurdish forces that have underscored the difficulty he faces in uniting the country.
-
Iran Protests Quelled Since Deadly Crackdown, Residents Say.
“There is massive disappointment and disillusionment,” one Tehran resident said. A human rights group acknowledged that demonstrations had been subdued since Sunday, with thousands of people detained.
-
Iran Has Had Protests Before. Will This Time Be Different?
Understanding the factors that can topple regimes.
-
Many Fiery Remarks, Little Clarity on What’s Next at Security Council Meeting on Iran.
Iran’s representative denied the country had killed protesters, as the U.S. ambassador said President Trump had made clear “all options are on the table” to stop the killing.
-
Israel Watches Iran Protests Closely, but Is Wary of Intervening.
Israel is unlikely to do much to try to precipitate a regime change in Iran, seeing the government as far from the brink of collapse and the current protests as insufficient to push it to that point.
-
Iran Denies Sentencing Protester to Death.
Iran denied sentencing a protester, Erfan Soltani, 26, to death. Soltani’s case had drawn intense international attention after his relatives and rights groups had said he would be executed imminently.
-
Iran Says It Will Not Execute Protester Amid International Outcry.
The judiciary said that Erfan Soltani was not sentenced to death, Iranian state media reported. His case has drawn attention to the fate of the arrested demonstrators.
-
Iran Prepares to Execute Protester.
Iran had been prepared to execute Erfan Soltani, 26, on Wednesday. He would have been the first protester to be executed in the latest wave of antigovernment unrest.
-
Trump’s Gulf Allies Do Not Want Him to Bomb Iran.
While several of the Gulf Arab countries harbor little love for Iran, they worry that the consequences of rising tensions could blow back on them.
-
What are Trump’s Options in Iran?
President Trump has said that “help is on the way” for Iranian protesters. Amid reports that thousands of the protesters have been killed, our national security correspondent David E. Sanger describes what some of Mr. Trump’s options might be.
-
Iran Prepares to Execute a Protester as Trump Threatens ‘Strong Action’
Rights groups and relatives said Iran planned to put an antigovernment protester to death for the first time during the latest wave of unrest in the country.
-
With Crackdown on Protests, Iran’s Government ‘Is Only Buying Time’
Its security forces have brutally defended the Islamic Republic, but the protests show that many Iranians consider it stagnant and ideologically hollow.
-
U.S. to Announce Palestinian Committee to Run Gaza.
Officials said the body’s leadership could be announced as soon as Wednesday, but U.S. efforts to shape postwar Gaza by disarming Hamas have faced hurdles.
-
U.S. to Name Palestinian Committee to Run Gaza.
Officials said the body’s leadership could be announced as soon as Wednesday, but U.S. efforts to shape postwar Gaza by disarming Hamas have faced hurdles.
-
A Timeline of Protests in Iran.
Amid a near-total communications blackout, witness footage trickling out of Iran paints a picture of how the country’s largest uprising in decades spread — and turned deadly.
-
Trump Urges Antigovernment Protesters in Iran to ‘Take Over’
“HELP IS ON ITS WAY,” President Trump said on social media. He has threatened to intervene militarily on behalf of the protesters if Iran uses lethal force.
-
Trump Says He Will Impose a 25 Percent Tariff on Countries Trading With Iran.
If President Trump follows through, some of Iran’s biggest trading partners, including China and India, could be hit hard.
-
‘Shoot to Kill’: Accounts of Brutal Crackdown Emerge From Iran.
The Iranian authorities have imposed an information blackout as they try to quell protests, but eyewitness testimony and videos conveying the deadly toll have made their way out.
-
Deposed Shah’s Son Seeks Center Stage Amid Iran Protests.
Reza Pahlavi, living in exile in the United States, has long marketed himself as a future leader of Iran. His father’s repressive legacy casts a long shadow.
-
Trump Explores ‘Many Options’ for Dealing With Iran.
President Trump is considering several options, including diplomacy and military force, for dealing with Iran, which has been rocked by violent protests.
-
How a Syrian Hiking Club Is Rediscovering the Country.
The nearly 14-year civil war prevented Syrians from traveling freely to many parts of their own country. After the conflict ended a year ago, a group of outdoor enthusiasts began exploring newly accessible areas, fueled by a sense of adventure and hope.
New York
-
In a State Notorious for Scandal, Corruption Fighters Are Targeted.
An anonymous negative ad campaign has been aimed at New Jersey’s departing attorney general. “It’s a warning to others,” one political scientist said.
-
Could Mamdani’s Child Care Plan Encourage a Baby Boomlet in New York?
Some New Yorkers hope that raising a child in the city could become more affordable thanks to Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s plans for free child care and preschool.
-
Psst, Mayor Mamdani: The Upper East Side Is More Fun Than People Think.
Beyond stuffy old money and noisy sports bars, hidden gems abound.
-
Mamdani Said He’d Make Buses Faster and Free. Now It’s This Guy’s Job to Do It.
Mike Flynn, a former intern who rose to the top of the agency, will be under a microscope, but far from the spotlight.
-
‘She Stared Back, Apparently Unfazed by My Rat Ears ’
A tour guide goes one step beyond, a macaw on the Q and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
-
Armed Robbers Steal At Least $110,000 Worth of Pokémon Cards.
Three men stole at least $110,00 worth of Pokémon cards from a shop in Lower Manhattan on Wednesday. The thieves held customers at gun point, smashed display cases and took money from the cash register. One of the items stolen was a first-edition Charizard card worth about $15,000, according to the store’s owner.
-
Mamdani Appoints Top Parks Official to Oversee New York’s Green Spaces.
The mayor announced Tricia Shimamura as the city’s new parks commissioner amid broad calls for more park funding.
-
At Least $110,000 in Pokémon Cards Stolen From Lower Manhattan Store.
The robbery at the Poké Court on Wednesday was the latest in a string of thefts of high-value Pokémon trading cards.
-
Before Criticizing Pro-Hamas Chants, Mamdani Sought Jewish Leaders’ Input.
The outreach by Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s team has demonstrated how the mayor is taking care to not inflame tensions on either side of the Israel-Gaza war.
-
A.I. Is Coming to Class. These Professors Want to Ease Your Worries.
Even as some instructors remain fervently opposed to chatbots, other writing and English professors are trying to improve them.
-
Mamdani’s Push to Halt Sale of 5,000 Apartments to Big Landlord Fails.
The sale of the apartments, whose residents had complained of neglect by management, to a troubled firm is an early test of the new mayor’s ability to deliver for tenants.
-
A $12.6 Billion Budget Gap May Complicate Mamdani’s Affordability Plans.
The New York City comptroller, Mark Levine, said that poor budgeting practices by the previous mayor, Eric Adams, had left the city with looming deficits.
-
Drunken Driver Who Killed 4 at Cookout Is Sentenced to Decades in Prison.
The driver, Daniel Hyden, was a substance abuse counselor who had past citations for driving under the influence.
-
Even Nicolás Maduro’s Prosecutors Are Tied Up Reviewing Epstein Files.
The Trump Administration’s exhaustive examination of materials on the convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein is drawing resources from other cases.
-
Why Some NYCHA Residents Are Getting Induction Stoves.
A pilot program in Housing Authority apartments will offer the trendy stoves, which improve air quality and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
-
N.Y.C. Council Leader Takes on Antisemitism, and Possibly Mamdani.
The Council speaker, Julie Menin, will introduce bills that would establish a buffer zone at houses of worship to keep protesters at some distance from congregants.
-
Nurses Describe Fear on the Job as Bitter Strike Enters Fifth Day.
Both sides in the labor dispute appear poised for a protracted battle, and only one of three hospitals was negotiating with the strikers.
-
Former Building Super Is Convicted of Stealing $350,000 From 98-Year-Old.
Rosalind Hernandez, who worked in a co-op building in Manhattan, befriended and then bilked a vulnerable resident, prosecutors said.
-
Number of Businesses in New York City Plunged Last Spring, Report Says.
Roughly 8,400 businesses closed in the second quarter of 2025, according to the most recent city data, creating the largest net decline in business activity since before the pandemic.
-
None of Mamdani’s Deputy Mayors Are Black. It Has Become a Problem.
Some Black and Latino leaders worry they are being denied access to power under Mayor Zohran Mamdani and that they may lose the ground they had gained under former Mayor Eric Adams.
-
Nydia Velázquez Gives Mamdani a Warning as She Endorses a Successor.
The veteran congresswoman said she would like Antonio Reynoso, the Brooklyn borough president, to replace her after she retires. She also said the mayor should stay out of political races.
-
Alexander Brothers Accuser Was Found Dead Last Year, Authorities Say.
The death of Kate Whiteman, whose accusation of sexual assault against Oren and Alon Alexander opened a floodgate of similar allegations, is under investigation.
-
Appeals Court Opens the Door to Mahmoud Khalil’s Rearrest.
Any new detention would not come immediately, and Mr. Khalil’s lawyers plan to appeal. But the ruling is a major blow to Mr. Khalil, a Columbia graduate and prominent figure in the pro-Palestinian movement.
-
Mamdani’s Consumer Protection Commissioner Vows More Aggressive Action.
“I want to be very public that there’s a new cop on the beat,” said Samuel Levine, the new commissioner of New York City’s Department of Consumer and Worker Protection.
-
A Horse Bolts, Renewing Debate Over Central Park Carriages.
The city’s 68 horse carriages continue to operate despite pressure from activists — and the Central Park Conservancy — to ban them.
-
Many Mayors Have Tried to Help Small Businesses. It’s Mamdani’s Turn.
Small business advocates in New York are excited that Mayor Zohran Mamdani is tackling the issue of excessive fees and fines, but they’ve heard similar promises before.
-
The Judge in the Maduro Case Is 92. All Eyes Will Be on His Stamina.
Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein was seen drifting in and out of sleep in court last year. The case of Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan leader, will test his endurance.
-
Woman Killed by ICE Agent Seemed at Fault, N.Y. Republican Says.
Bruce Blakeman, the likely Republican candidate for governor, said the killing of Renee Good was just one point of disagreement between him and Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat.
-
Prosecutors Say Officer Who Hurled Cooler Was Not Trying to Save Lives.
Lawyers for Sgt. Erik Duran said he had to make a “life-or-death” decision when he struck Eric Duprey as he rode a motorbike recklessly down a sidewalk. Mr. Duprey died almost immediately.
-
As N.Y.C. Nurses’ Strike Continues, Both Sides Prepare for a Long Fight.
Hospital administrators and union officials appear to be digging in for an extended battle over staffing levels and pay.
-
How Will the New Chancellor Change New York Schools?
Kamar Samuels, Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s choice to run the school system, has favored integration and academic rigor.
-
A Week Without Heat in New York City.
Some renters are constantly left without heat or hot water during the winter, leading them to bundle up in layers of clothing or risk fires by using space heaters.
-
Trial to Begin for N.Y.P.D. Sergeant Who Threw Cooler at Fleeing Man.
Erik Duran, who fatally struck the man, Eric Duprey, as he fled on a motorbike in 2023, faces charges of manslaughter, assault and criminally negligent homicide.
-
Mayor Mamdani Names Transit Veteran as Taxi Commissioner.
Midori Valdivia would head the Taxi and Limousine Commission, overseeing more than 115,000 for-hire vehicles. The mayor said drivers deserved a “forceful champion.”
-
Eric Adams Hawked a Crypto Coin. A Day Later, $1 Million Was Missing.
Officials tied to the venture insisted no money had been stolen, but the withdrawal caused the coin’s value to plunge.
-
Mr. Mamdani Goes to Albany, a Backbencher No More.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani of New York City returned to the State Capitol for the first time since taking office, underscoring the shifting political winds since his victory.
-
Former Adams Aide Charged With Bribery and Wire Fraud.
Anthony Herbert is accused of bribing a funeral director and applying for a fraudulent loan to keep a nonexistent baked-goods business afloat during the pandemic.
-
Lower Bills and ‘Go Bills’: 8 Takeaways From Hochul’s State of the State.
In her address on Tuesday, Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York focused on affordability, while pushing for nuclear power and new restrictions on religious protests.
-
Video of Runaway Carriage Horse in Manhattan Fuels Debate Over a Proposed Ban.
The horse bolted through traffic and its carriage sideswiped a taxi, reigniting questions over the safety of carriage horses in Central Park.
-
Militant Pro-Israel Group Agrees to Halt Operations in New York.
While dissolving the group is not part of a settlement between the organization, Betar, and the office of New York Attorney General Letitia James, it will shut down.
-
Defense Challenges Pizza Evidence in Gilgo Beach Serial Killings Case.
In a nearly 180-page filing, lawyers for Rex Heuermann, charged in seven killings, argued that the prosecution had improperly seized their client’s pizza crusts and portrayed him as porn-obsessed.
-
N.Y.C. Bakery Workers Demand Owners Stop Supporting ‘Israeli Occupation’
Workers at the popular New York City chain Breads Bakery, who are trying to unionize, included the demand in a list alongside higher wages and special overtime pay.
-
What to Know About the N.Y.C. Nurses’ Strike and How It Affects Patients.
Nearly 15,000 nurses went on strike Monday at some of New York City’s top hospitals, with workers demanding more robust staffing and higher pay.
-
Hochul’s State of the State Quandary: How Far to the Left Will She Lean?
Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York adopted some of the affordability message of Mayor Zohran Mamdani of New York City as she faced a contested re-election bid.
-
Hochul’s Election Year Agenda May Include ‘New York Values’
Gov. Kathy Hochul will reveal her priorities on Tuesday in her State of the State Message. She may take a stand against ICE after the killing of Renee Nicole Good.
-
New York Punishes 12-Year-Olds With Solitary Confinement, Lawsuit Claims.
The lawsuit, filed last week in federal court in Manhattan, claims that state officials use solitary confinement for minor misbehavior and as a way to mitigate low staffing.
-
A Governor’s Legacy: Fewer Shootings, Free College and Covid Deaths.
After eight years as governor of New Jersey, Philip D. Murphy, a former ambassador to Germany and Goldman-Sachs executive, is leaving office. Mikie Sherrill will be sworn in on Jan. 20.
-
ICE Arrests N.Y.C. City Council Employee at Routine Appointment.
City officials said the employee, a data analyst from Venezuela, had legal authorization to work and remain in the United States until October.
-
Bettor in Gambling Inquiry Says Messages Were About Roosters, Not Baseball.
In a filing in the case involving Emmanuel Clase of the Cleveland Guardians, the bettor said he had never been tipped off about pitches and had only traded messages with the player about cockfighting.
-
Pitching Crypto and Needling Mamdani: Adams’s Post-Mayoralty Takes Shape.
Two weeks ago, Eric Adams was in Times Square to lead the New Year’s Eve ball drop as his last act as mayor. He returned on Monday to promote a new business interest.
-
Mamdani Brings Affordability Push to Arts With Pick to Lead Film Office.
Rafael Espinal, the current head of the Freelancers Union, will serve as the new director of the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment.
-
Why New Jersey Is Running Out of Groundhogs.
Since Milltown Mel died, a New Jersey town has faced a groundhog crisis. Now the governor has vetoed an effort to bring in out-of-state replacements.
-
Lawyer Whom Maduro Didn’t Hire Is Booted From His Case.
Last week, a lawyer came forward claiming to represent the unseated president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro. The judge overseeing the case settled the matter on Monday.
-
New York City Nurses Go on Strike.
Nearly 15,000 nurses at major New York City hospitals went on strike on Monday, demanding more robust staffing levels, higher pay and better safety precautions.
Business
-
Prominent Architecture Firm Is Accused of Illegally Ousting Employees.
A federal labor regulator says the firm, Snohetta, laid off eight employees in retaliation for trying to unionize.
-
I.M.F. Raises Forecast for Global Growth as Tariff Drag Fades.
The 3.3 percent rate for 2026 would match last year’s pace. Booming investment in artificial intelligence is buttressing global output.
-
As Davos Convenes, Deference to Trump Has Replaced Everything.
The traditional rhetoric of the World Economic Forum centered on global integration, climate change and international cooperation. Not anymore.
-
China’s Population Shrinks Again as Policies Fail to Reverse Decline.
With fewer babies and more deaths, China’s population fell for a fourth straight year as policymakers face a demographic crisis in the making.
-
Real Estate Crash Weighs on China’s Economic Growth.
Falling apartment prices have erased the savings of millions of Chinese households, but exports lifted the economy to 5 percent growth last year.
-
How to Prevent Aging Parents and Relatives From Making Financial Mistakes.
Getting family members to listen to you when you think they are headed down a dangerous financial path can be difficult. But there are preventive steps you can take.
-
We’re in an Era of ‘Re-Globalization,’ FedEx C.E.O. Says.
Raj Subramaniam took over three years ago from FedEx’s founder, who ran the company for nearly 50 years. Since then, technology, tariffs and other disruptions have “fundamentally shifted” patterns of global trade.
-
No One’s Buying? Maybe Consumers Are Just ‘Choiceful,’ Executives Say.
A new way to characterize unenthusiastic consumers has overtaken earnings calls.
-
National Anger Spills Into Target Stores, Again.
Videos of immigration officers dragging an employee out of a store near Minneapolis, the retailer’s hometown, set off renewed political debate after years of boycotts.
-
Tech Firms Are Persuading Retailers to Put A.I. Everywhere.
Stores of all kinds are using artificial intelligence to sell everything from luxury handbags to hay for horses.
-
‘Punched in the Face’ by a Rail Disaster, an Ohio Town Fights Its Way Back.
Residents and officials are still trying to revitalize East Palestine nearly three years after a derailment and chemical burn.
-
‘Like a Timeshare’: Doctors Get Creative as Rents Climb.
Physicians with independent practices are having to cobble together unconventional office arrangements at a time of rising costs and consolidation in the medical field.
-
Black Women Turn to One Another as Their Career Paths Suddenly Recede.
Black female professionals have seen a steep drop in employment over the last year. They are turning to each other for pep talks and résumé advice.
-
Trump and States Aim to Stop A.I. From Inflating Energy Bills.
Demand from centers that power artificial intelligence has driven up electricity bills, frustrating consumers.
-
Trump Praises Hassett, but Casts Doubt on Making Him Fed Chair.
The blowback set off by the Justice Department’s criminal investigation into Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the central bank, has shaken up the race to replace him.
-
Is This Billionaire a Financial Genius or a Fraudster?
Michael Saylor’s financial alchemy thrust an ordinary software company, Strategy, into the center of the crypto frenzy. It all worked spectacularly, until now.
-
What’s Next for Cuba, Now That Its Main Oil Supplier Is Gone?
The Soviet Union was Cuba’s benefactor for decades. Venezuela took up the slack, and Mexico has supplied “humanitarian aid.” But the world is changing rapidly, our columnist says.
-
Stock Investors’ Strategy for 2026:‘Don’t Fight the White House’
From oil drillers to credit card companies, President Trump has been a market mover this year.
-
Battles Over Truth Rage Online Amid Iran’s Internet Blackout.
The shutdown of online discourse within Iran has allowed both the government and its critics to flood social media outside the country with disinformation campaigns and fake images.
-
Uber’s Quest to Crack Japan Leads Through a Rural Hot-Springs Town.
The ride-hailing giant’s chief executive has made a bet on how it can finally grab a bigger piece of one of the world’s largest taxi markets.
-
Taiwan Reaches Trade Deal with Trump, Pledges More U.S. Chip Factories.
The United States agreed to lower tariffs on Taiwanese goods from 20 to 15 percent, while Taiwan says it will invest in more chip manufacturing in the U.S.
-
‘Star Wars’ Boss Departs, Ending an Asteroid-Filled Reign.
Kathleen Kennedy stepped down as Lucasfilm’s president and returned to producing. Two studio veterans took over.
-
Big Plan for Fannie and Freddie I.P.O. in Flux as Trump Pushes Affordability.
Six months after President Trump told Wall Street banks to prepare a swift stock offering, there is no firm plan for how to take the giant mortgage firms public.
-
Cracks Begin to Appear at the Nation’s Biggest Banks.
This week, Bank of America, Citi, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo released fraught earnings reports as President Trump’s threatened cap on credit card rates loomed large.
-
Elon Musk’s X Restricts Ability to Create Explicit Images With Grok.
Bowing to pressure, the company said it would restrict X users from generating explicit images of real people in jurisdictions where such content is illegal.
-
Trump Vows to Make Venezuela Rich. It Will Take More Than U.S. Cash.
History suggests that the price of oil and a wider distribution of wealth are as important as foreign investment.
-
Why Banks Are So Worried About a 10% Credit Card Rate Cap.
President Trump revived a campaign promise to cap interest rates, but it is unclear how he would make that a reality.
-
Despite Trump’s Claims, Grocery Prices Are Rising.
Weather, supply, tariffs, labor and changing consumer habits continue to drive up the cost of groceries. President Trump falsely claims prices are falling.
-
These Gyms’ Most Intimidating Machine: The Front Door.
A new kind of tap-in, tap-out system at gyms has some New Yorkers flustered.
-
Verizon Outage Affects Tens of Thousands of Users, Tracking Site Shows.
A spokeswoman for Verizon said the carrier was working to resolve the issue.
-
What to Know About Bilt’s New Rewards Program for Mortgage and Rent Payments.
Bilt, a rewards and payments start-up, has three new credit cards that can help users earn points when they pay their mortgage. You will need to do math.
-
Britain Awards Wind Farm Contracts That Will Power 12 Million Homes.
The British government provided guaranteed electricity prices to a group of wind farm developers in what it says is an effort to bring down power costs for consumers.
-
The Swedish Start-Up Aiming to Conquer America’s Full-Body-Scan Craze.
Neko Health, backed by the Spotify founder Daniel Ek, plans to open in New York this spring.
-
Saks Files for Bankruptcy as Department Stores Fight for Survival.
The parent company of Saks, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman struggled with debt, designers and customers in recent years.
-
China Announces Record Trade Surplus as Its Exports Flood World Markets.
China’s surplus reached $1.19 trillion last year, a 20 percent increase from 2024, as Beijing kept the currency weak and pursued self-reliance to replace imports.
-
Danish Wind Farm Developer Scrambles to Salvage U.S. Projects.
Orsted’s C.E.O. says it plans to move quickly to complete a $6.2 billion wind farm off Rhode Island after a judge struck down President Trump’s bid to halt it.
-
JPMorgan Made Less Money Last Year, Facing Pressure on Multiple Fronts.
The nation’s largest bank earned $57 billion in 2025, and Jamie Dimon, its chief executive, said “the benefits of deregulation” would help in the future.
-
Microsoft Pledges to Pay More for Electricity, Drawing Praise From Trump.
The tech giant is responding to concerns that data centers are driving up electricity costs in some communities.
-
Global Central Bankers Express Support for Fed Chair After Criminal Investigation.
The defense comes after Jerome Powell pushed back on what he described as pressure by the Trump administration to cut interest rates in the United States.
-
Delta Offers Optimistic Outlook as Travelers Continue to Splurge.
Delta Air Lines said it was expecting profits to rise by around 20 percent in 2026 thanks to strong demand for premium tickets.
-
Venezuela’s Oil Riches Are Years Off, but Winners and Losers Will Emerge.
Companies that already have operations in the country stand to benefit, but those that have profited from a standoff between Caracas and Washington could lose out.
-
Why China Is Suddenly Obsessed With American Poverty.
State media, embracing the gaming phrase “kill line,” is asserting China’s political superiority over the United States, deflecting focus on China’s own economic challenges.
-
Labor Secretary’s Aides Placed on Leave in Misconduct Investigation.
The Labor Department is investigating a complaint alleging misconduct by Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer.
-
Top Fed Official Conveys Little Urgency for Immediate Rate Cuts.
The Federal Reserve is likely to hold interest rates steady when it meets at the end of the month, keeping tensions high with President Trump.
-
Fed Changes Course and Takes On Trump’s Political Fight.
The Justice Department’s decision to open up a criminal investigation of Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, is a major escalation in the pressure campaign against the central bank to cut interest rates.
-
Wall St. Shows Nerves as Stocks, Bonds and the Dollar Slip on Fed Threat.
The broad shift out of U.S. financial assets revived last year’s trend called the “sell America” trade.
DealBook
-
Big Oil’s Complicated Calculus for Investing in Venezuela.
The industry has long prioritized projects with quick and reliable payback. Trump is pushing for a return to risk.
-
The New Mayor of Davos.
Larry Fink, BlackRock’s chief executive, led an effort to elevate the World Economic Forum next week, the first without the event’s founder, Klaus Schwab.
-
A Crypto Revolt Against a Crypto Bill.
Legislation to establish a regulatory framework for digital tokens has been thrown into turmoil — by one of its biggest champions.
-
Banks Ready Battle Plans to Save Their Credit Card Businesses.
“Everything’s on the table,” an executive at JPMorgan Chase said, as the industry seeks to head off President Trump’s effort to cap interest rates.
-
The Powell Defense Grows.
Former Federal Reserve chiefs, Republican senators and — perhaps most important, many bond investors — raised concerns about an investigation into the bank’s leader.
-
The Potential Fallout From a Legal Attack on Powell.
A criminal investigation into Jay Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, may be the most consequential attack yet on the central bank’s political independence.
Economy
-
Trump Said He’d Unleash the Economy in Year 1. Here’s How He Did.
As a candidate, President Trump pledged to boost the stock market, bring back manufacturing jobs and improve other elements of the economy. A year after his return to office, his record is mixed.
-
Has Trump Delivered on His Economic Promises?
President Trump made a number of economic promises on the campaign trail. Now that we’re one year into the Trump administration, our chief economics correspondent, Ben Casselman, looks at key economic data to see what Trump was able to accomplish, and where he has so far failed to deliver what he promised.
-
Trump Imposes Limited Tariffs on Foreign Semiconductors.
The tariffs will allow President Trump to take a cut of Nvidia’s chip sales to China while putting off a decision about imposing higher taxes on the chip industry.
-
As Trump Pushes Housing Affordability, His Mortgage Chief Undermines It.
Under Bill Pulte, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have pulled away from efforts to help low-income people buy homes.
-
What to know about the report.
-
Food Prices Were Stubbornly High Last Year.
Beef, coffee and produce were among the items that surged in price, inflation data showed.
-
Why haven’t tariffs had a bigger impact on prices?
-
Trump Administration Nears Trade Deal With Taiwan.
The deal would cut tariffs and include a commitment from Taiwanese Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation, the island’s chip giant, to build more manufacturing plants in the United States.
Energy & Environment
Media
Your Money
Technology
-
All Bets Are On: The Rise of Prediction Markets.
Billions of dollars are trading hands on sites like Polymarket and Kalshi, where people bet on everything from Taylor Swift’s wedding date to election outcomes.
-
OpenAI Starts Testing Ads in ChatGPT.
The company said on Friday that it would start serving ads in the free version of its chatbot over the next several weeks.
-
Inside the Fight to Keep Iran Online.
Activists spent years preparing for a communications blackout in Iran, smuggling in Starlink satellite internet systems and making digital shutdowns harder for the authorities to enforce.
-
The Biggest U.S. Crypto Company Asserts Its Power in Washington.
The top executive of the crypto exchange Coinbase scuttled a planned Senate committee vote on a major cryptocurrency bill after voicing his concerns, a sign of the company’s clout.
-
OpenAI Signs Another Deal With a Computer Chip Maker.
The agreement with the start-up Cerebras is the latest in a series intended to expand the A.I. company’s computing power.
-
California Investigates Elon Musk’s xAI Over Sexualized Images.
The state will examine whether xAI, which owns the social media platform X and created the A.I. chatbot Grok, violated state law.
-
Can A.I. Generate New Ideas?
Systems like OpenAI’s GPT-5 are accelerating research in math, biology and chemistry. But there is a debate over whether it can do that work on its own.
-
2026 May Be the Year of the Mega I.P.O.
If SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic go public, they will unleash gushers of cash for Silicon Valley and Wall Street.
-
Starlink Users in Iran Get Free Internet Access, Nonprofit Says.
Under a near-total communications blackout, users of Elon Musk’s satellite service have gotten online without paying, an organization that works on web access said.
-
Meta Plans to Cut Around 10% of Employees in Reality Labs Business.
The layoffs are set to be announced this week and would affect Meta’s work on the metaverse, as the company spends heavily on building artificial intelligence.
-
Apple Teams Up With Google for A.I. in Its Products.
Apple was facing increasing questions about its plans for artificial intelligence as other big tech companies invested tens of billions in the technology.
Personal Tech
Sports
Baseball
Obituaries
-
Ralph Towner, Eclectic Guitarist With the Ensemble Oregon, Dies at 85.
A composer and pianist as well, he was a prolific recording artist who integrated jazz, classical and world music traditions in a career that spanned seven decades.
-
Joe Montgomery, Who Made Bicycles Lighter, Dies at 86.
A founder of Cannondale, he was among the first in the U.S. to mass-produce bikes frames out of large-diameter aluminum tubes, replacing heavier steel.
-
Joel Primack, Physicist Who Helped Explain the Cosmos, Dies at 80.
A professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, he was a key contributor to a landmark paper that laid out how the universe came to look like it does today.
-
Walter Steding, Otherworldly One-Man Band and Portraitist, Is Dead at 75.
A self-taught musician, he wore flashing goggles while playing the violin. But his real skill was as a painter, and his portraits offered an eerie commentary on the times.
-
Leonard D. Jacoby, 83, Dies; Brought Legal Services to the Masses.
He and Steven Z. Meyers opened their first low-cost legal clinic in 1972. Within a decade, they had revolutionized the legal industry.
-
John Cunningham, Character Actor and Broadway Stalwart, Dies at 93.
He was a familiar face from Broadway productions of “Company,” “Titanic” and “Six Degrees of Separation” and numerous film and TV appearances.
-
Frank Dunlop, 98, Dies; Gave British Theater a Free-Spirited Spin.
In 1970, he founded London’s Young Vic, an adventurous “people’s theater” — the Who took the stage at one point — before shaking up the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
-
Scott Adams, Creator of the Satirical ‘Dilbert’ Comic Strip, Dies at 68.
His chronicles of a corporate cubicle dweller was widely distributed until racist comments on his podcast led newspapers to cut their ties with him.
-
Elle Simone Scott, Chef and Cooking Show Stalwart, Dies at 49.
She was the first Black cast member on the PBS show “America’s Test Kitchen,” and used her influence to help other female chefs of color.
-
David Mitchell, Who Led Fight on Drug Prices, Dies at 75.
After receiving a diagnosis of terminal cancer, he used his experience in public relations to draw attention to the skyrocketing cost of medication.
Africa
Art & Design
Estados Unidos
Music
Politics
Briefing
Podcasts
-
‘Heated Rivalry’ Is More Than Just Sex.
“Heated Rivalry,” the Canadian drama about a hot-and-heavy romance between two closeted pro hockey players, has become a surprise hit, particularly with women. Wesley Morris explores why the show has been getting so much buzz.
-
Jonathan Haidt Brings New Evidence to the Battle Against Social Media.
The author of “The Anxious Generation” shares his latest research about the harms social media is doing to children.
-
2hollis Is Too Famous to Go Online Now.
On a new episode of “Popcast,” the rising alt-pop star 2Hollis spoke to Jon Caramanica and Joe Coscarelli about his experience with the internet and limiting his social media use.
-
2hollis on Losing His Childhood Home in the L.A. Fires.
One year after the Los Angeles fires, 2hollis talks about losing his childhood home in Altadena last year.
-
2hollis’s Dad Always Knew He’d Be a Star.
Alt-pop star 2hollis’s dad, John Herndon, the drummer for Tortoise, always knew his son was going to be a star. They joined Jon Caramanica and Joe Coscarelli, hosts of “Popcast,” to discuss 2hollis’s career.
-
2hollis Addresses the ‘Nepo Baby’ Label.
On a new episode of “Popcast,” the rising alt-pop star 2Hollis spoke to Jon Caramanica and Joe Coscarelli and ... his dad, the drummer for the veteran Chicago rock band Tortoise, to address accusations that his parents’ careers in music are responsible for his own success.
-
Romeo Santos Brought English Speaking Artists Toward Bachata.
Romeo Santos and Prince Royce linked up with “Popcast” to discuss the ways that earlier bachata collaborations with artists like Usher and Drake predicted how “Despacito” and Bad Bunny would bring English-language artists toward Latin music.
-
Jonathan Haidt Strikes Again + What You Vibecoded + An Update on the Forkiverse.
“If we can’t win on social media, then we definitely can’t win on A.I.,” says Haidt.
-
Why ASAP Rocky’s New Album Took So Long.
The musician and actor A$AP Rocky sat down with Jon Caramanica and Joe Coscarelli, the hosts of “Popcast” at The New York Times, to discuss the release of his first album in eight years.
-
Romeo Santos Reminisces About His Drake Shoutout.
Romeo Santos sat down on the “Popcast” couch and recalled when Drake referenced Aventura on “The Motto” and the collaboration that followed.
-
George Saunders on People, Kindness and Evil.
In 2013, the author George Saunders gave a speech extolling the importance of kindness that went viral and became a best-selling book. He returned to questions about kindness and human behavior on “The Interview.”
-
Why George Saunders Is Not Worried About Death.
“Vigil,” the latest novel by George Saunders, follows an oil tycoon on his deathbed. On “The Interview,” Mr. Saunders discussed how death can bring clarity to life.
-
Inside an Exploding Marriage: Belle Burden in Her Own Words.
After 20 years, Belle Burden’s picture-perfect marriage came crashing down when her husband suddenly walked away.
-
Can We Build a Better Social Network?
A “Hard Fork” and “Search Engine” collaboration.
-
George Saunders on the Value of Human Contact.
When the author George Saunders was awarded a medal by the National Book Foundation last year, he was introduced as “the ultimate teacher of kindness and of craft.” On “The Interview,” he discussed the value of human connection, and where it’s being lost.
The Daily
The Headlines
-
Trump’s New Greenland Threat Outrages Allies, and China’s Birthrate Plunges.
Plus, chimney sweeps are making a comeback.
-
‘The Headlines’ News Quiz: Jan. 16, 2026.
Following the news? Tracy Mumford has some questions for you.
-
Trump Threatens to Invoke Insurrection Act, and Grocery Prices Keep Going Up.
Plus, your Friday news quiz.
-
Federal Agent Shoots and Injures Man in Minneapolis, and F.B.I. Searches Reporter’s Home.
Plus, a space station evacuation.
-
Prosecutors Resign Over ICE Investigation, and Israel Is Still Demolishing Gaza.
Plus, the battle over taxing billionaires.
-
Minnesota Sues to Stop Federal ‘Invasion,’ and Iranians Describe a ‘Blood Bath’
Plus, the rise of at-home medical tests.
Science
Space & Cosmos
Climate
-
Explore a century of Times’s reporting from Antarctica.
-
From Seal Meat to Ice Sheets: A Century of Reporting From Antarctica.
Generations of Times journalists have journeyed there with scientists. Their coverage traces humankind’s changing relationship with the most mysterious continent.
-
A Century of The New York Times in Antarctica.
Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong takes a trip into the New York Times archives to see how our understanding of Antarctica has changed over the past century.
-
Kristina Gjerde, Advocate for Ocean Biodiversity, Dies at 68.
She played a key role in negotiating a landmark United Nations treaty to protect the high seas, an agreement that went into effect this weekend.
-
World’s First Treaty to Protect the High Seas Becomes Law.
Over two decades after negotiations began, the High Seas Treaty is designed to protect biodiversity in international waters enabling countries to create special conservation zones.
-
How Wall Street Turned Its Back on Climate Change.
Six years after the financial industry pledged to use trillions to fight climate change and reshape finance, its efforts have largely collapsed.
-
Sailing Through a ‘Death Trap’ Once Covered by Antarctic Ice.
Part of Pine Island Glacier collapsed several years ago, forming an unstable inlet where no ship had sailed. Until now.
-
Supreme Court to Decide if the Pesticide Roundup Is Shielded From Lawsuits.
The case could affect thousands of claims that the widely used weedkiller causes cancer.
-
Judge in Virginia Hands Trump 3rd Setback This Week on Wind Farms.
Construction can continue on an $11.2 billion project off the coast of Virginia, said to be 70 percent complete.
-
Preparing to drill into a glacier.
-
Trump Wants to Halt Almost All Coal Plant Shutdowns. It Could Get Messy.
Even as administration officials vowed this week to head off scheduled retirements, some aging plants are now breaking, and costs could run to the billions.
-
The Cities That Broke Heat Records Last Year.
Thousands of cities around the world saw their hottest year on record in 2025 as the planet has inched closer to a key temperature threshold.
-
The Sounds of Antarctica? Flying in the Cold? Your Questions, Answered.
Is it hard to fly a helicopter in the Antarctic cold? What do penguins sound like? How about the instruments designed to test the waters below the Thwaites Glacier? Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong finds some answers to viewer questions.
-
In a Setback for Trump, Judge Says N.Y. Wind Farm Can Resume Construction.
A federal judge said the Empire Wind project off Long Island would suffer “irreparable harm” if the Trump administration continued to hold up work.
-
How One Company Is Pushing a Private Takeover of Flood Insurance.
For half a century, a federal program has covered most at-risk properties. Now, a private company is pitching a plan to shrink the government’s role.
-
A Look At Antarctica From Above.
After nearly two weeks at sea without being able to launch his drone, New York Times photographer Chang W. Lee finally captures Antarctica from the air.
-
Walking Off Into a Universe of White.
Bad weather has postponed attempts to set up camp on the Thwaites Glacier. So researchers got onto the sea ice and met a local.
-
2025: A Year of Fire and Floods.
Last year was Earth’s third hottest globally, but temperature is just one measure of climate change’s influence.
-
How Hot Was Your Town Last Year? Look Up Where You Live.
2025 was the third hottest year on record, but thousands of cities saw record heat and one broke a record for cold.
-
The View From Above Antarctica’s Fastest Melting Glacier.
Times journalists were able to get tantalizingly close to the Thwaites glacier, which scientists are hoping to spend weeks studying up close.
-
E.P.A. Moves to Limit States’ Ability to Block Pipelines.
The agency wants to curtail a section of the Clean Water Act that Democratic governors have used to restrict fossil fuel development.
-
U.S. Emissions Jumped in 2025 as Coal Power Rebounded.
The increase in planet-warming emissions came after two years of decline as demand for electricity has been surging.
-
Camping on a Glacier? Watch Your Step.
Experienced Antarctica guides tell Raymond Zhong, our climate reporter, how they set up camp on the Thwaites Glacier so scientists can measure how fast it’s melting. The biggest safety concern? Crevasses.
-
Trump Cuts to Energy Projects in Blue States Were Unlawful, Judge Rules.
The Energy Department canceled $7.5 billion in Biden-era energy spending, largely in Democratic-led states, during last year’s government shutdown.
-
Judge Strikes Down Trump’s Latest Effort to Stop Offshore Wind.
The ruling means that construction can continue on Revolution Wind, a $6.2 billion project off the coast of Rhode Island, at least for now.
-
E.P.A. to Stop Considering Lives Saved When Setting Rules on Air Pollution.
In a reversal, the agency plans to calculate only the cost to industry when setting pollution limits, and not the monetary value of saving human lives, documents show.
The Upshot
Opinion
-
No, Trump Can’t Cancel the Midterms.
Despite how much the president talks about canceling the 2026 midterms, the columnist Jamelle Bouie explains why he can’t on this episode of “The Opinions.”
-
MAGA After Trump.
The president’s approval rating is a misleading signal, argues the columnist David French on “The Opinions.” Without Trump on the ballot, midterm elections will expose the true strength — or weakness — of MAGA politics.
-
In Search of Love and Meaning in a Changing World.
Readers respond to a column by David Brooks.
-
The Underachiever in Chief?
How much has Trump actually accomplished one year into his second term? According to the conservative analyst Yuval Levin, not much.
-
Conservative Politics Can’t Just Be About Hate.
Politics in America has taken an ugly turn, the conservative analyst Yuval Levin says on “The Ezra Klein Show,” arguing it has become too influenced by fear.
-
The High Cost of ICE’s Low Standards.
By doubling its force while slashing training time, ICE has scaled up its culture of violence into an unrestrained and unaccountable machine.
-
How to Train Citizens to Observe ICE.
What does training to document ICE actions look like? On “Interesting Times,” one activist explains how his Minneapolis-based nonprofit teaches citizens to be constitutional observers.
-
What Kind of Immigration Enforcement Is Legitimate?
As ICE’s approach to immigration enforcement faces mounting criticism, Ross Douthat, the host of “Interesting Times,” asks the Minneapolis activist Francisco Segovia what legitimate immigration enforcement might look like.
-
Dear America, Greenland Is Not on Zillow.
Trump wants Greenland? Its previous colonizer has some thoughts.
-
Trump’s New Military Threat to Minnesota.
Readers react to the unrest in Minnesota. Also: Parallels to the past; the Nobel Peace Prize medal; nuclear power; Bob Weir and the Grateful Dead.
-
ICE Is Losing the Political Battle.
“When I look at the ICE operation in Minnesota,” says the Opinion columnist Jamelle Bouie, “I see a White House that is panicking and that is losing.”
-
The Geopolitics of Greenland and NATO.
Readers respond to articles about the U.S. threats against Greenland. Also: A woman’s aging face.
-
The People of Iran Deserve the World’s Support.
The protest movement represents the best hope for a government that does less damage in the world and better serves its own citizens.
-
American Citizens Are Living in Fear.
Readers share their anxieties over the aggressive tactics of ICE agents. Also: Undermining the Fed’s stability; one reader’s Trump quiz.
-
These 11 Republican Trump Voters Love the Venezuela Action, but Greenland ….
The group discusses the economy, immigration, President Trump’s recent actions in Venezuela and more.
-
James Talarico Gives JD Vance a Bible Lesson.
The Texas state representative James Talarico, who’s running for Senate and also studying to be a minister, says Vice President JD Vance has misread the Bible on immigration.
-
The Religious Right Uses Christianity for ‘Control’
The Texas state representative and Senate candidate James Talarico, who’s studying to be a Christian minister, says the religious right has distorted his faith. He tells the Times Opinion columnist Ezra Klein that focusing on abortion and L.G.B.T.Q. issues over economic justice isn’t justified by Scripture.
-
Iranians Deserve New Leadership.
“The protesters increasingly don’t just want reform, they want to topple the entire theocratic regime,” says the Opinion columnist Nicholas Kristof.
-
After the Fatal ICE Shooting, Hard Questions We Must Ask.
The killing of Renee Good raises issues of states’ rights, human dignity and when the use of deadly force is justified.
-
Trump’s ‘Propaganda of the Deed’
The columnists Ezra Klein and M. Gessen discuss the message President Trump sent by ousting the president of Venezuela.
-
The Killing of Renee Good Was a Turning Point.
The columnists Ezra Klein and M. Gessen discuss the recent shooting of a protester by an ICE agent in Minneapolis and what it means for the country.
-
How the Trump Administration Hacked Our Ignorance.
David French explains on “The Opinions” why he believes a key secret to the Trump administration lies in its ability to exploit “civic ignorance.”
-
We Need to Stop Asking This Question.
The Opinion columnist Carlos Lozada argues that one familiar question “pretends to be this big dot-connecting moment” but it’s not.
-
The Stories That Old Books Tell.
Responses to an essay by Roger Rosenblatt about keeping and tossing old books. Also: A.I. and human identity; new heights for Stephen Colbert.
Editorials
-
For Trump, Justice Means Vengeance.
One year into the president’s second term, America risks losing a central feature of our democracy: that we are a country ruled by laws, not by the whims of one man.
Letters
Op-Ed
-
Why Independent Voters Are Not Necessarily Moderate.
These days, the label “independent” does not necessarily signify moderation or centrism.
-
Donald Trump’s Middle Finger.
The president doesn’t have ideals. Just enemies.
-
Trump’s Spectacle of Cruelty in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis stands in defiance to Trump’s dark vision of America.
-
Americans Are Turning Against Gay People.
We seem to be in a new era of anti-gay prejudice.
-
Don’t Harm the Country We Call Home.
Greenland is an ally of the United States.
-
How the American Legal Profession Can Regain Its Dignity.
We are stronger when we act together.
-
Stop Worrying, and Let A.I. Help Save Your Life.
A.I. isn’t perfect, but it doesn’t have to be to improve medicine.
-
I’m the Secretary General of the Council of Europe. This Is Something I Thought I’d Never Have to Write.
International law is either universal or meaningless. Greenland will show which one we choose.
-
Trump is Obsessed With Oil. But Chinese Batteries Will Soon Run the World.
China isn’t just building gigantic amounts of power. Its businesses are reshaping technological foundations to electrify the world.
-
An Old Theory Helps Explain What Happened to Renee Good.
She had no way of knowing she had crossed a line.
-
Lula: This Hemisphere Belongs to All of Us.
Only together can we overcome the challenges that afflict a hemisphere that belongs to all of us.
-
The Message in Renee Good’s Last Words.
The ICE agent who shot Renee Good did not seem to hear what she was really saying.
-
Trump’s Greenland Threats Will Boomerang on America.
A territorial grab by the United States would mean the end of NATO.
-
Local Newspapers Are Closing. Local News Is Surviving.
Local print media is in a death spiral. Nonprofit journalism start-ups show how journalists can still do essential work.
-
Martin Luther King’s Son: ‘Justice Demands Endurance’
Martin Luther King’s son and Norm Ornstein, a leading scholar of voting rights, discuss a case that could hollow out the Voting Rights Act.
-
‘Landman’ Isn’t Just Oil Industry Propaganda.
The show does far more to criticize the oil and gas industry than it does to bolster it.
-
One Year of Trump. The Time to Act Is Now, While We Still Can.
The United States is broken, but not in every way.
-
This Is the Only Card Trump Can Play.
Minneapolis in 2026 is starting to look like Boston in the 1770s.
-
Behold Donald of Deliria!
Trump, sinking into the quicksand of imperialism.
-
How War With China Begins.
Even more likely than an all-out invasion of Taiwan may be “gray zone” pressures, such as cutting internet cables.
-
Will 2026 Be the Year Voters Pull the Emergency Brake?
The midterms will be a battle for control of Trump’s legacy.
-
Trump’s Second Term Has Ended the Conservative Era.
The right’s future is all about American nationalism.
-
You’re Never Too Young to Love the Grateful Dead.
I was interested in the lost world this music conjured, a world of teenagers like my aunts who had left home young and hit the road.
-
By Raiding a Reporter’s Home, Is the F.B.I. Weaponizing National Security?
Knowing what the government is up to is essential for democracy to work.
-
‘Dilbert’ Was Always MAGA.
My visit with Scott Adams, who anticipated Donald Trump with his comic strip.
-
This Is How Your Mind Works.
Our thoughts are an ever-changing swirl of fears, feelings, desires, impulses, memories and body sensations that interact to form a single mind.
-
Minneapolis Feels ‘Like Being in a Civil War’
Documenting ICE is dangerous. This man wants you to do it anyway.
-
The Right Wants ICE to Crush the Wine Mom Insurgency.
In the MAGA imagination, white women are supposed to be helpmeets, not harpies.
-
Has Trump Achieved a Lot Less Than It Seems?
The conservative political analyst Yuval Levin gives Ezra Klein his review of Trump’s first year back in office.
-
Iran’s Regime Is Losing Its Greatest Weapon: Fear.
The bulwark of Iranian oppression is fear. The latest round of demonstrations shows it has been breached.
-
Hope and Fear Mingle in Cuba With the Loss of Maduro, and Oil.
The electricity may go off, but islanders see a glimmer of hope in Maduro’s departure.
-
Something Is Rotten in the State of America.
This is the thanks Demark gets?
-
The Gaudy, Nasty Fictions of Donald J. Trump.
This is neither law nor order, and the consequences can be deadly.
-
We Are the Bystanders This Time.
I used to think Americans were different from Germans.
-
‘Bad, Bad News for the G.O.P. Over the Long Haul’: 2 Opinion Writers on the Trump G.O.P.
The general sense of the world being chaotic does not necessarily help Trump.
-
The One Place Presidents Turn in Moments of Chaos and Uncertainty.
For presidents of both parties, Latin America has served as a wellspring of perpetual reinvention and the source of much of their ideological creativity.
-
Democrats Will Lose in 2028 Unless They Change Course Now.
Despite the successes of 2025, the party still needs a radical shake up.
-
Renee Good’s Family Should Be Able to Sue the Officer Who Killed Her.
An ICE killing in Minneapolis can be the impetus for finally closing a gaping hole in our constitutional protections.
-
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Unhappiness.
One reason for the toxicity of American politics may be that our quality of life is slipping behind our peers’.
-
Forget Trump’s Tariffs. The Real Danger Lies in China’s Trade Surplus.
China has announced a more than trillion-dollar trade surplus that poses a greater danger to world commerce than Trump’s tariffs.
-
ICE Is Waging War on Blue Cities.
Will the agency’s brutality and capriciousness create blowback?
-
Public Shame Is the Most Effective Tool for Battling Big Tech.
Our federal government won’t regulate fast enough (or at all), but that doesn’t mean regular Americans are helpless.
-
This Is Not How a Normal President Speaks.
The president’s assertion of unlimited authority is a total rejection of popular sovereignty and the logic of the Constitution.
-
What Comes Next for Venezuela — and Who Decides?
A Venezuelan economist weighs in on the role of Trump, oil and the sidelining of the Nobel Prize-winning opposition leader María Corina Machado.
-
$25 Billion. That’s What Trump Cost Detroit.
The president’s hostility to E.V.s is hurting U.S. automakers.
-
Something Bad Is Brewing on Venezuela’s Border.
An armed guerrilla group stands emboldened to challenge the authority of the Colombian state — and U.S. ambitions in Venezuela.
-
The Wages of the Ayatollahs’ Antisemitism.
A regime that would rather pursue a perpetual jihad against the Zionist enemy than feed its own people will eventually fall.
-
Can James Talarico Reclaim Christianity for the Left?
Ezra Klein and State Representative James Talarico of Texas discuss his faith, his politics and his Senate race.
-
If Power Corrupts, What Do We Have Here?
Trump claims that the only limits on what he can do are his mind and his morality. What could go wrong?
-
Trump’s Scheming to Sack Powell Paves the Road to Constitutional Ruin.
A criminal investigation of a sitting Fed chairman, with the obvious intent of stripping him of his independence, has never happened before.
-
Trump Can’t Bomb Iran Into Being a Democracy.
There’s plenty America can do short of war to support the country’s protesters and help oust the ayatollah.
-
The Internet May Look Different After You Listen to This.
Even experts can’t tell what’s made by A.I. So what happens to trust now?
-
Trump Has Declared Premature Victory in Venezuela.
Allowing the remnants of Maduro’s regime to retain authority, even temporarily, is a potentially catastrophic mistake.
-
The Hochul-Mamdani Experiment Is an Opportunity for Democrats.
The governor and the mayor need each other, and that offers a chance for synthesis at a time when the center and left are often at odds.
-
I’m Betting that OpenAI Will Go Broke.
Artificial intelligence’s promise is real. But some of the most prominent A.I. companies might not make it.
-
The Resistance Libs Were Right.
Trump’s message, the emotional core of his movement, has always been textbook fascism.
-
Trump’s Attack on the Fed Is Already Backfiring.
And the market is gently shrugging.
Opinion | Politics
-
Suddenly, Alaska Is in Play.
Mary Peltola’s entry into the Alaska Senate race is a building block in an electoral strategy Democrats have been working on for months.
Arts
-
As Kennedy Center Rebrands, It’s Mired in Black Tape.
After the institution’s board declared it the Trump Kennedy Center, a lot of signage around the building is in the midst of a makeover.
-
After an Earthquake, Preserving a Slow Craft in a Fast World.
In Wajima, Japan, where hundreds of homes and studios were destroyed, master-class artisans are struggling to keep lacquer alive and nurture the next generation of creators.
-
Humanities Endowment Awarding Millions to Western Civilization Programs.
The National Endowment for the Humanities is giving more than $40 million to programs that have been embraced by conservatives as a counterweight to liberal-dominated academia.
-
He Survived Dachau. He Captured Its Horrors on Paper the Next Day.
When Brian Stonehouse, a British spy posing as an artist, was freed from the concentration camp, he made drawings to document what he had witnessed.
-
In Letters to a Friend, Harper Lee Expanded on Her View of the South.
In decades of correspondence, the author gave her friend, JoBeth McDaniel, a mix of opinions, advice on writing and insight into the impact of the Civil Rights movement.
-
Can the American Oboe Be Revived?
As demand for classical instruments has waned over the years, one man is determined to keep producing the oboe. Jim Phelan, the owner of the A. Laubin oboe company, has developed a new material to build his oboes from and hopes that will help people to keep playing the instrument for years to come.
-
After Sudden Loss, Park Avenue Armory Hires New Artistic Leader.
Deborah Warner, known for directing theater and opera, succeeds Pierre Audi, who died last year. Her own work is expected to be part of her programming.
-
Leaders of Historians’ Group Veto Resolutions Critical of Israel.
The executive council of the American Historical Association said the resolutions, including one accusing Israel of ‘scholasticide’ in Gaza, would put the group at risk.
-
Dan Bongino, No Longer at the F.B.I., Will Return to Podcasting.
The former F.B.I. deputy director, who had hosted a right-wing, pro-Trump podcast, will restart the show after a rocky tenure at the law-enforcement agency.
-
8 Stars Nikki Glaser Roasted in Her Golden Globes Monologue.
The comedian, who hosted the awards ceremony for the second year in a row on Sunday, began by turning her wit mostly toward the men in the room.
Art & Design
-
A ‘Weird, Wonderful’ Night at the ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’
City Winery’s 50th anniversary screening of the film encouraged some inventive dress up, including tributes to fan favorites like Rocky and Dr. Frank-N-Furter.
-
Met Museum Employees Vote to Unionize.
The bargaining unit, which includes curatorial, conservation and retail departments, could represent about half of the Met’s work force.
-
White Lies, Inner Truth: The Contradictions of Henri Rousseau.
His naïve style landed him outside the firmament, but his painterly innocence was more seductive — and intentional — than many critics appreciated.
-
Trisha Donnelly’s Mysteries.
The artist isn’t known for her drawings, but in a new show these cryptic, sometimes unsettling works speak volumes.
-
Smithsonian Turns Over More Records in the Face of a Trump Deadline.
The institution, which is viewed as independent, has sought to reduce tensions with the White House by complying with some of its demands for documents.
-
The Man From Plains Was Also a Painter.
Amy Carter, the daughter of former president Jimmy Carter, selected paintings and memorabilia for two Christie’s sales. The prices might surprise you.
-
How Readers Voted on 17 Ways to Improve New York City.
The top suggestions include spending more of the city’s budget on parks and libraries and fixing the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway.
-
The New Museum Sets Reopening Date With New Artist Commissions.
After over three years of construction, the museum will open its new building on March 21 with an ambitious show exploring how technologies have changed what it means to be human.
Dance
Music
-
‘An Unbelievable Mess’: Artists Are Stymied by Trump Travel Bans.
Musicians, theater groups and others from overseas are facing visa challenges and rising costs, posing a looming crisis for the performing arts sector.
-
Springsteen Denounces ICE Deployments and Renee Good’s Killing.
In a surprise appearance in New Jersey, the musician dedicated his song “The Promised Land” to Ms. Good, who was killed by an ICE agent in Minneapolis this month.
-
Rhoda Levine, Pathbreaking Opera Director, Dies at 93.
Starting out in the 1970s as a rare woman in a field dominated by men, she directed the premieres of a pair of politically charged modern classics.
-
8 Songs We’re Talking About This Week.
Mitski and Flea have new albums on the way, and a classic Prince track is surging on the singles chart thanks to “Stranger Things.”
-
Viva the Absurd: ‘What to Wear’ and a Wave of Opera Surrealism.
Michael Gordon and Richard Foreman’s “What to Wear” at BAM is a visually rich, textually odd work — and a hot commodity.
-
Julio Iglesias Denies Sexual Abuse Claims by Former Employees.
The singer called the accusations “completely false” in a statement released after Spanish prosecutors said they would investigate.
-
Washington National Opera Finds a Stage Outside the Kennedy Center.
Spring performances of “Treemonisha” and “The Crucible” will be held at George Washington University.
-
ASAP Rocky Grew Up, Settled Down (with Rihanna) and Returned to Rap.
The artist reflects on how the chaotic eight years since his last release — including three kids and two trials — led to his latest album, “Don’t Be Dumb.”
-
Bob Weir Is Gone, but the Dead’s Music Plays On.
A concert honoring the Grateful Dead guitarist showed the durability of the band’s music and culture, even as its members dwindle.
-
As Megadeth Counts Down to Extinction, Dave Mustaine Opens Up.
The heavy metal pioneer known for his lightning-fast shredding and snarling vocal style is going out his way, with a final album and tour.
-
Applying Richard Foreman’s Off-Kilter Aesthetic (and Ducks) to Opera.
The composer Michael Gordon collaborated with Foreman on “What to Wear” in 2006. The opera makes its belated New York premiere at BAM on Thursday.
-
Want Your MTV? A Rogue Site Is Bringing Back the Videos.
The unofficial website MTV Rewind has recreated the channel’s classic era, pulling in thousands of clips. Its developer says it’s an antidote to the algorithms.
-
Can the American Oboe Sing Again?
Building the instrument is hard enough. Turning a profit is a killer. But Jim Phelan is bent on reviving one of the great names in classical music.
-
The Kid Mero, Now a Morning-Radio Motormouth.
The podcast star from the Bronx is taking over the marquee a.m. slot on New York’s storied hip-hop station Hot 97. We rode along on his first day.
-
BTS Unveils World Tour Dates. Here’s Where They’ve Been.
The K-pop superstars will go on a colossal comeback tour: 79 shows across five continents in 11 months. But why were they gone for so long?
-
Review: Boston Symphony Can’t Make the Case for Barber’s ‘Vanessa’
Performing “Vanessa” is just what the Boston Symphony should be doing. But its concert staging came off as drab and ineffective.
-
7 Albums I’m Looking Forward to in 2026.
Megan Moroney, Bruno Mars, Danny L Harle and more.
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130 Tracks of Guitar Per Song? Sunn O))) Is Back, and Going Big.
The hard-to-categorize duo recorded its new, self-titled album surrounded by nature. It’ll be the band’s first on the storied Seattle label Sub Pop.
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L.A. Reid Settles Lawsuit Shortly Before Sexual Assault Trial.
Mr. Reid, a Grammy-winning music producer, had been accused of assaulting an executive who worked for him and then retaliating against her.
Television
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‘Finding Her Edge,’ Plus 8 Things to Watch on TV This Week.
Another ice-skating romance premieres, and a reboot of “Star Search” comes to Netflix.
-
‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Season 1 Premiere Recap: A Tall Tale.
The latest and most humorous offering in the “Game of Thrones” universe follows the hulking, lovable Ser Duncan, who may or may not be a real knight.
-
On ‘S.N.L.,’ Trump Recaps His Recent ‘Legal-ish’ Activities.
The first episode of 2026, hosted by Finn Wolfhard of “Stranger Things,” satirized that hit Netflix series and conjured a Harry Potter reboot à la “Heated Rivalry.”
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‘S.N.L.’ Hasn’t Produced a Superstar in a While. Could It Be Marcello Hernández?
The comic’s new special, “American Boy,” shows that he has the leading-man charisma and hunger. His career will be interesting to watch.
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‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ Review: Go Westeros, Young Man.
A lighter story about an itinerant sword-swinger cuts “Game of Thrones” down to small pleasures.
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Rebecca Hall Is OK With Her Cats Waking Her at All Hours.
“I find it weird when I go away and there are no noises of someone knocking over something or munching at the cat food or playing with a toy at 3 a.m. annoyingly keeping you up.”
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It’s ‘Game of Thrones.’ Just Not as You Know It.
With no dragons and no warring dynasties, HBO’s “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” is the first test of whether the “Thrones” formula works on a human scale.
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Seth Meyers Never Guessed Trump Was Such a Milk Fan.
The “Late Night” host said there was no way President Trump drank milk, “unless someone tricked you into thinking your Diet Coke came from a cow.”
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‘The Pitt’ Season 2, Episode 2 Recap: Dirty Work.
Viewers got extra intimate this week with the hard physical realities of life in the emergency ward.
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‘Riot Women’ Review: Women of a Certain Rage.
There’s much more to Sally Wainwright’s series about middle-aged punk rockers than the music.
-
Holly Hunter Reaches for the Stars.
In “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy,” she got to play a few things she never had in her varied career: a space captain and a woman over 400 years old.
-
Colbert Jokes That Trump Has Found ‘a New National Bird’
“You got to hand it to that auto worker for getting under Trump’s skin,” Stephen Colbert said after the president appeared to flip off a heckling worker at a Ford plant.
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Tony Dokoupil’s Road Trip on CBS News Hits a Rough Patch.
A stretch of big news revealed growing pains for CBS’s new evening anchor and problems with its Bari Weiss-era philosophy.
-
Stephen Colbert Accuses Trump of ‘Invading Minnesota’
“Has anyone told him that they don’t have oil?” Colbert said of the president’s plan to send 1,000 more immigration officers to Minnesota.
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Kiefer Sutherland Is Arrested After Assaulting Ride-Share Driver, Police Say.
The actor also made “criminal threats” toward the driver, according to the Los Angeles police.
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Did the Worst Netflix Special of the Year Win the Golden Globe?
That “Ricky Gervais: Mortality” won for best comedy sends a message about the lack of respect given to stand-up.
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Emilia Clarke Is Done With Dragons.
The “Game of Thrones” actress plays a fledgling spy in “Ponies,” a Cold-War era drama that takes her career in a new direction.
-
Jon Stewart Skewers Trump as ‘Acting President of Venezuela’
“Doesn’t your oath of office to America have a noncompete?” the “Daily Show” host asked President Trump.
-
‘Tehran’ Review: Israel vs. Iran, Retold as a Spy Thriller.
The third season of the Israeli series, rescheduled after last summer’s attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities, finally premieres on Apple TV.
Theater
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‘Masquerade’ Reimagined ‘Phantom,’ and the Fans Are Flocking.
The immersive adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical is a hit, with some people coming back a dozen times since it began performances last summer.
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Tina Packer, Powerhouse of Shakespeare Performance, Dies at 87.
She was a founder and the longtime artistic director of Shakespeare & Company, a repertory theater in western Massachusetts, and directed all his plays.
-
How a Play Skewering Modern Russia Evaded a Crackdown to Become a Hit.
Everyone expected “The Kholops,” a drama exploring oppression, to be shut down soon after it opened in St. Petersburg. Instead, it is two years into a sold-out run.
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‘The Disappear’ Review: A Couple on the Rocks and Out of Sync.
Erica Schmidt’s discordant comedy, starring Hamish Linklater and Miriam Silverman, is a farce clumsily straddling two genres.
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Cambridge Was a Culture Shock. She’s Getting the Last Laugh.
Jade Franks mines the awkwardness of social mobility in her one-woman show “Eat the Rich.”
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Tessa Thompson in ‘Hedda,’ and More Theater to Stream.
Other picks include “Bat Out of Hell: The Musical,” a new season of Playing on Air podcasts and “Lazarus,” featuring the music of David Bowie.
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Alicia Keys Says ‘Hell’s Kitchen’ Will End Broadway Run and Open Overseas.
Though the show will close in New York next month, a North American tour will continue, and productions in Australia, Germany and South Korea are planned.
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Adrien Brody and Tessa Thompson to Make Broadway Debuts in ‘Fear of 13’
The play, about a man who spends decades on death row before being exonerated by DNA evidence, will have a 16-week run this spring.
Books
Book Review
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A Briny Englishman (and Booker Prize Winner) Says Farewell.
Julian Barnes writes about illness and love in “Departure(s),” which he claims is his last novel.
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He Put Dr. Seuss, Ayn Rand and ‘Ulysses’ on Your Bookshelves.
In “Nothing Random,” her rousing biography of Bennett Cerf, Gayle Feldman conjures an era when a glamorous publishing figure could be a household name.
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She Knows It’s Wrong, but She’s Still Hot for Teacher.
Jennette McCurdy follows “I’m Glad My Mom Died” with “Half His Age,” a debut novel that confirms her gift as a chronicler of disaffected girlhood.
-
Jennette McCurdy Wants to See You Squirm.
The author of the memoir “I’m Glad My Mom Died” hopes her debut novel, about a teen’s sexual relationship with her teacher, will make readers uncomfortable.
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For These Struggling Teenagers, Rock Climbing Is More Than a Sport.
Gabriel Tallent’s new book, “Crux,” is a rowdy and poignant novel about two high school seniors trying to transcend the hard circumstances of their lives.
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One Thousand and One Nights, and One Tumultuous Year.
In her new book, Jeanette Winterson attempts to frame modern-day issues within a classic storytelling text.
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The Books We’re Looking Forward to This Winter.
Three Book Review editors on what titles they’re most excited about this winter.
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Jeff Kinney’s Favorite Funny Books for Young Readers.
The author of the “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” series shares a handful of titles that have helped shape his sense of humor.
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The Dirty Truth About Your Clean-Energy Car.
In a new book, Nicolas Niarchos traces the mineral supply chain for lithium-ion batteries, exposing their considerable human and environmental costs.
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6 Books We Love This Week.
Reading recommendations from critics and editors at The New York Times.
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Why Trump Always Thanks You ‘For Your Attention to This Matter’
How a simple catchphrase sums up the president’s theory of executive power.
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A Blockbuster Memoirist Returns to China, and the Mother Who Shaped Her.
Jung Chang’s 1991 memoir, “Wild Swans,” sold millions. Its follow-up delves further into a complex personal and political history.
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Laura Dave Rereads Nora Ephron’s ‘Heartburn’ Every Year.
“It’s my comfort book,” she says of the comic novel about a busted marriage. Her own new thriller is a sequel to “The Last Thing He Told Me.”
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A Retelling of ‘Moby-Dick,’ With a Young Woman at Its Center.
“Call Me Ishmaelle,” by Xiaolu Guo, audaciously revises Herman Melville’s American classic.
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Why Does This Teenager Hate His Mother So Much?
A complicated mother-son relationship reaches a turning point in this coming-of-age novel.
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If the Royal Tenenbaums Were Middle-Class and Likable, They’d Be This Madcap Family.
A semi-estranged midlife couple and their three precocious daughters form the center of Madeline Cash’s satirical novel, “Lost Lambs.”
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Karl Ove Knausgaard Crafts a Deal With the Devil.
The fourth novel in his Morning Star series follows an ambitious young photographer in 1985 London.
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Why Keeping Score Isn’t Fun Anymore.
In a new book, C. Thi Nguyen looks to his personal passions — from video games to yo-yoing — to illuminate the downside of our increasingly gamified world.
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The Lie That Elite Colleges, and a Nation, Wanted to Believe.
“Miracle Children” details how a Louisiana school exploited the demand for stories of Black trauma.
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Do You Know These Modern Books Inspired by Myth and Legend?
Ancient legends from thousands of years ago often find fresh audiences in new books. Test your memory of recent titles with this short quiz.
Movies
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‘Roofman,’ ‘While We’re Young’ and More Streaming Gems.
This month’s guide to the under-the-radar movies of your subscription services includes unconventional romantic comedies and vibrant indie dramas.
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‘Sentimental Value’ Dominates the European Film Awards.
The Norwegian drama collected six awards at the event, which was moved to January this year in hopes of increasing its visibility for Oscar voters.
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One Actor, Two Bloodthirsty Villains.
In Jack O’Connell’s hands, the vampire of “Sinners” and the cult leader of “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple” are vicious in very different ways.
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Photographing the Golden Globes Winners.
Chantal Anderson breaks down how she captured this year’s Golden Globe winners backstage on an assignment from The New York Times.
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Five Science Fiction Movies to Stream Now.
In this month’s picks, hijacked bullet trains, comet creatures and time loops in the British countryside.
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Five Free Movies to Stream Now.
From a Wim Wenders masterpiece to a Stanley Tucci gem, these films all revolve around the possibility of fresh starts and new beginnings.
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8 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
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In ‘Seeds,’ Farms and a Way of Life Hang in the Balance.
The director Brittany Shyne’s film is slow-moving and lyrical in its focus on the seasonal rhythms of the work, even as it shifts to policy concerns.
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‘The Rip’ Review: Clean Cop, Dirty Cop.
Matt Damon and Ben Affleck play grizzled cops looking at each other sideways in this Netflix crime thriller that has all the concepts but not much else.
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‘Queen Kelly’ Review: His Majesty, Von Stroheim.
The 1929 silent film returns in a shimmering, sensitively scored restoration that brings out the lurid and the romantic in Erich von Stroheim’s story of orphan-meets-prince.
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‘A Useful Ghost’ Review: Machine Yearning.
A grieving widower finds his problems are just beginning when his wife returns in the form of a household appliance in this gloriously funny, shape-shifting debut feature.
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‘Sound of Falling’ Review: A Fortress of Feminine Mysteries.
This detour-heavy film moves across time periods to follow girlhood mischief, desire and abuse on a German farm.
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‘Shuffle’ Review: The Real Price of Rehab.
Benjamin Flaherty discovered some disturbing tendencies in the addiction recovery industry. His documentary is upsetting and revelatory.
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‘A Private Life’ Review: Jodie Foster Uncovers a Twisty Plot in Paris.
Speaking in French (but cursing in English), the actress plays an American psychiatrist abroad who stumbles into unexpected intrigue.
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‘Night Patrol’ Review: Things That Go Bump in the Night.
Rival gangs in Los Angeles join forces when a bloodsucking unit of the police department invades their community.
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‘Deepfaking Sam Altman’ Review: Altmanesque.
A filmmaker who can’t secure an interview with the A.I. executive turns to technology for a solution.
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‘All You Need Is Kill’ Review: It Doesn’t Bear Repeating.
By condensing the logic of the action, this anime adaptation of Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s light novel undermines the story’s excitement.
-
‘28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Review: Sympathy for the Devil.
The latest installment in the zombie saga is all about evil and good, and whether any of it exists.
-
The Art of a Good Awards-Show Speech.
Demi Moore nailed it at last year’s Globes, and so did Teyana Taylor this year. The best acceptances keep in mind four key guidelines.
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Jodie Foster: An American Oscar-Winner in Paris.
In “A Private Life,” the actress takes on her first solo lead role in which she speaks fluent French, but her French connection goes all the way back to childhood.
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Telling the Stories of a House Full of Secrets.
Mascha Schilinski’s movie “Sound of Falling,” which takes place over a century in a rural farmhouse, shows how trauma is transmitted through generations.
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Backstage With the Golden Globe Winners.
Rose Byrne, Owen Cooper, Seth Rogen, Teyana Taylor and other award winners in the spotlight.
Food
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To Tune Out Food Noise, Our Critic Listened to His Hunger.
In the third part of a monthlong series, Pete Wells and experts say a healthier diet begins with understanding what drives your eating, and slowing down.
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‘These Are the Best Biscuits I Have Ever Made, Hands Down’
Edna Lewis’s biscuits, served warm with butter and your favorite jam, are a lovely Sunday breakfast.
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Turkey Meatloaf, Green Beans and Potatoes.
There’s something satisfying about building a hearty, substantial meal out of a lean, inexpensive protein.
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Salted Butter or Bust.
Samantha Seneviratne takes the Bake Time Questionnaire, and she has strong feelings about salt.
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Tzatziki Chickpea Salad.
Vibrant with the sharp creaminess of tzatziki, the Greek yogurt dip, this dish embodies the cool, easy eating of the warmer months. Crisp cucumbers and hearty chickpeas are dressed with a lemony and garlicky Greek yogurt mixture.
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Whole Roasted Squash With Tomato-Ginger Chickpeas.
With creamy squash, sticky chickpeas and tangy yogurt, this vegetarian sheet-pan feast easily serves a crowd. The method here doesn’t bother with cutting rock-hard raw winter squash. Instead, roast them whole until you can rip them apart into wedges.
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I Can’t Believe It’s Not Chicken (Super-Savory Grated Tofu).
Grating super-firm tofu is one of the best party tricks in the kitchen. It makes tofu not only quicker to prepare (no pressing required!) but also deceptively meaty. The grated tofu is then pan-fried until golden and coated in a flavor-rich sauce.
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Sheet-Pan Shrimp Tikka.
Zainab Shah’s quick, flavor-packed meal brings the smoky, tangy essence of tandoori-style cooking into the kitchen with minimal effort. The shrimp are marinated in spiced yogurt to infuse them with bold flavor before being roasted over a bed of vegetables in just minutes.
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Spanakorizo With Jammy Eggs.
Bright and soulful, spanakorizo is a beloved Greek dish, with a name that reflects its combination of two key ingredients: spinach and rice. This version is fairly traditional in its essence, relying upon rice, spinach, lemon and herbs, but includes some flourishes.
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Restaurant Review: Lei in Manhattan.
Ligaya Mishan, a New York Times chief restaurant critic visits Lei, a warmly and welcoming wine bar in Manhattan, that manages to both honor tradition and bend it.
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Malaay Qumbe (Coconut Fish Curry).
Variations of coconut fish curry abound up and down the Swahili Coast, so much so that the dish is often broadly referred to as East African fish curry. This version of coconut fish curry leans heavily on xawaash, a spice blend that is at the heart of Somali cuisine.
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Petite but Powerful Spinach Egg Bites.
And more reader favorites from this week.
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Herby Pork Laab With Chile.
In this take on the classic Thai dish laab (also spelled larb) moo, ground pork is pan-cooked, then stirred together with a combination of funky fish sauce, fresh and dried chiles, shallots, lime juice and an abundance of fresh herbs for brightness.
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There’s Never Been a Better Time to Eat Chinese Food.
Chains from the East Asian nation are popping up across New York City, bringing with them excellent hot pot, dumplings and mapo tofu.
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An Easy Pasta That’s Hearty, Tangy and So Creamy.
Cabbage, sour cream and melty Gruyère star in Melissa Clark’s latest one-pot weeknight dinner.
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18 Healthy Chicken Recipes That Will Get You Excited About Chicken Again.
Cooking the same poultry dishes week after week can be a drag. These vibrant and nourishing new recipes are anything but.
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It’s ’Tato Time.
Baked. Boiled. Souped. Regardless of form, potatoes will always be there for you.
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This Slow Cooker Chicken Dish Is Efficient and Exciting.
Tajín adds its characteristic chile-lime kick to this saucy mix of chicken, peppers and beans.
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Italian Broccoli Salad.
This adaptable make-ahead salad is a great instant lunch or side dish. It starts with raw broccoli florets and stems, thinly sliced into irregular shapes to create many textures.
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Improv Night.
Zaynab Issa’s curried red bean soup with kale riffs on minestrone with heady spices like cumin, coriander and turmeric alongside ground chiles for heat.
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The Dinner Yotam Ottolenghi Can’t Wait to Eat in Front of the TV.
These spiced potatoes are like deconstructed loaded fries, the perfect easy meal for a cozy night on the couch.
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Denée Benton’s Dining Tag Line Is ‘A Bite for a Bite’
The “Gilded Age” star takes on the Where to Eat questionnaire.
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Carta, in the West Village, Keeps the Wine Flowing at Aperitivo.
The new wine bar, also in the West Village, focuses on France and Greece; an Australian pub opens on the Lower East Side; and more restaurant news.
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Steakhouse-Inspired Sheet-Pan Gnocchi With Mushrooms and Spinach.
Fast dinners for cold nights (and some longer cooks for slow days).
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11 Easy Ground Turkey Recipes for No-Fuss Dinners.
This affordable, versatile meat can be the star of your weeknight cooking.
-
That Restaurant You Love Will Close One Day. What to Do?
Beloved places to dine out are portals to past versions of ourselves. But they keep disappearing.
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Beige Is Beautiful.
Chicken piccata pasta, roasted cod and potatoes and sticky date and brown butter oatmeal are cozy, monochromatic comforts.
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7 Smart Cooking Tips for the Best Chicken Soup of Your Life.
It’s reliable, sure, but it can also be exciting with these expert tips.
Style
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To Cuff or Not to Cuff? That Is the Ultimate Pants Question.
A turnup at the hem of your trouser legs used to be the norm. Our critic explains how it became a matter of choice, and how to decide.
-
The Chicken Runner of Tyler County, West Virginia.
A high school track star enhances his social media presence with his mile-long stunts.
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Do You Have an Object You’ve Kept as a Reminder of Love?
It could be something easily overlooked: a folded note in a wallet, a concert ticket or an old key. We’re interested in the quiet keepsakes that people hold on to as proof of love.
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It’s a Farm, a Gym, and a Club Where Deals Get Made in the Sauna.
An extreme athlete built a wellness lair in New Jersey and turned it into the members-only club of his dreams.
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What’s the Thing Only Ralph Lauren Can Bring?
The brand’s first men’s only runway show in over 20 years left our critic pleasantly surprised.
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Why Do We Want It to Be 2016 Again?
A new trend has some social media users feeling nostalgic for a decade ago, but the posts reveal something deeper about the state of the internet.
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New Nike Shoe Evokes Motel Where Martin Luther King Jr. Was Killed.
LeBron James’s new sneaker seeks to honor the civil rights leader with a color palette inspired by the Memphis motel where King was assassinated in 1968.
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Unsure What to Wear to a Wedding? You’re Not Alone.
Wedding dress codes like “black tie optional” are meant to signal a desire for formality without the pressure. But they often cause more confusion than clarity for guests.
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From a D.J. Set to Church, and Back Again.
When the writer Lamorna Ash set out to explore young people’s relationship to faith and religion, she found herself questioning her own.
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A New Coveted French Accessory.
A Parisian brand’s leather notebooks have for some become a status symbol to flaunt online and off.
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They Ran a Campaign Together, Then Love Came After.
When Talia Marcus and Charles Blaettler met while working on the campaign trail, they weren’t expecting love. Good thing it came anyway.
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Please Cheat on Me.
Why did I keep fantasizing about catching my faithful boyfriend in bed with another woman?
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A Slow, Awkward Dance Started It All.
Before Paul Melnikow and Alan Pierson spoke to each other, they danced at the ‘queer prom,’ about 20 hours into Taylor Mac’s 24-hour performance.
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For Two Floridians, a Michigan Winter Solidified Their Bond.
Ashley Knott and Tobias Kammerer are opposites — she’s very social, while he needs “to be peeled like an onion.” But a big move created a deeper connection.
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The Hip Priest, the Ex-Hedge Funder and the $10 Million Townhouse.
When a pastor learned his childhood home might undergo a glow-up, he saw his beloved Brooklyn further receding — and took to a different kind of pulpit.
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Would You Wear Balenciaga at the Gym?
In Pierpaolo Piccioli’s second collection, he stretches the label into some new shapes.
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The Kids Have All Moved Out and It’s Just Us. What Now?
More time to focus on each other might seem like a good thing, but not every relationship survives the transition to an empty nest.
-
Men’s Coats That Make a Strong Impression.
Come wintertime, it could be said that the coat, not the clothes, makes a man.
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Tiny Love Stories: ‘I’m 23. He’s 40.’
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.
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Leonardo DiCaprio, Benicio Del Toro and Rose Byrne Pick Up Awards in New York.
The stars were honored at the annual National Board of Review gala, where winners called attention to protests in Minneapolis and the violent crackdown in Iran.
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A New Era of Taylor Swift Fandom.
The mega star has always embraced cringe. Are fans still buying it?
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Can I Tell My Sister That Our Friends Don’t Want to Travel With Her?
A reader feels conflicted about taking a trip with friends who specifically asked that a travel-challenged sister not come along for the ride.
-
What Does the Saks Bankruptcy Mean for Shoppers?
Answers to this and other questions about the financial crisis in America’s biggest luxury department store.
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One Was Ready for a Life Partner. The Other, a ‘Vaccine Summer.’
Joel Kim Booster, the actor and comedian, and John Michael Sudsina became “vacation boyfriends” while in Mexico with friends in May 2021.
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A Mustardy Winter Jacket and Two Lush Fur Coats.
A pair of Bernese Mountain dogs and their owner looked charming while strolling through London.
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Who Is Watching ‘Heated Rivalry’?
A Golden Globes appearance by the stars of “Heated Rivalry,” HBO Max’s show about gay hockey players, reflected how it has built a big-tent fan base.
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Teyana Taylor, George Clooney and Jacob Elordi Toast the Golden Globes.
After the final award had been handed out, stars dispersed across Los Angeles for exclusive after-parties at hot spots like Spago and the Chateau Marmont.
-
Fashion Highlights From the 2026 Golden Globes.
Vanessa Friedman, our fashion director and chief fashion critic, recaps what she saw on the red carpet for the 2026 Golden Globes.
Love
Magazine
T Magazine
Travel
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Weight-Loss Drugs Could Save U.S. Airlines $580 Million Per Year.
A study by the financial firm Jefferies highlights a surprising perk for carriers: lower fuel costs as slimmer passengers lighten their aircrafts’ loads.
-
Economy Seats With Less Legroom? This Time, the Budget Move Won’t Fly.
WestJet, Canada’s second-largest carrier, backpedaled on a new seating plan after videos of crammed travelers went viral on social media.
-
California Will Waive State Park Entry Fees on M.L.K. Day.
Gov. Gavin Newsom framed the move as a rebuke to President Trump, who recently cut the holiday from the list of free-entry days at U.S. national parks.
-
Waterfalls and Wildflowers: Hiking South Africa’s Highest Mountains.
About 200 miles from Johannesburg, the Drakensberg region offers a breathtaking landscape of stark ridges and green valleys.
-
Hesitant to Visit the U.S. for the World Cup? We Want to Hear From You.
International soccer fans face hurdles like travel bans, long visa delays and high ticket prices for U.S. matches. Will they be enough to keep you away?
-
36 Hours in Sapporo, Japan.
The snowy capital of the island of Hokkaido offers a quieter alternative to Japan’s congested “Golden Route” of Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto.
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In Jackson Hole, a Different Kind of Skiing.
A Wyoming valley known for its adventurous downhill skiing also has plenty of opportunities for exploring the area on cross-country skis.
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Top 10 Reader Favorites From Our ‘52 Places to Go’ List.
Castles, coastlines, remote islands and more: Here are the destinations you, our readers, saved the most thus far from this year’s travel list.
Real Estate
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$1.5 Million Homes in California.
A ranch house in South Lake Tahoe, a Queen Anne Revival in San Jose and a bungalow in Los Angeles
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An Art Collector’s Vision Set in Rock in Millbrook, N.Y.
After years of planning, Artur Walther and the architecture firm SO-IL built a house for communing with nature.
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Rent Controlled vs. Rent Stabilized: Here’s How the Rates Work.
There are about one million rent-stabilized units in New York City, and fewer than 25,000 rent-controlled units.
-
The Man Who Saw School Buses as Vehicles for Possibility.
Lucas Sweeten converted his first school bus into a mobile home in 2007. Now he works with students to transform school buses to help their communities.
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$1.8 Million Homes in France.
This week’s properties are a designer’s four-bedroom house in Sète; an apartment in Montpellier’s historic center; and a country-styled villa also in Montpellier.
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Larry Ellison Sells Longtime San Francisco Home for $45 Million.
Anthony Hopkins buys another house in Los Angeles and Martha Plimpton bids farewell to Brooklyn.
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They Left Their Empty Nest for a Fresh Start in Helena, Montana.
After their daughters left for college, a couple looked to trade their suburban lifestyle for a new house near Helena’s central core. Here’s what they found.
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Homes for Sale in Brooklyn and Manhattan.
This week’s properties are in Dumbo, the Upper East Side and Chelsea.
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Why Staten Island Has the Highest Home Turnover Rate in N.Y.C.
Homeowners in the Bronx and Queens owned their homes the longest before selling in 2025.
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Homes for Sale in New York and Connecticut.
This week’s properties are a three-bedroom in Yonkers and a five-bedroom in Fairfield.
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$1 Million Homes in Oregon, Texas and New York.
A midcentury-modern in Eugene, Ore., an 1884 farmhouse in McKinney, Texas, and an 1890 townhouse in Hudson, N.Y.
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Everything Is Romantic in Louise Roe’s Living Room.
The English fashion journalist and designer created a cottagecore fantasy with Georgian-style treasures, layered lighting and antique artwork.
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Whitefish, Mont., Natural Beauty, Not Taken for Granted.
When the snowfall’s good, signs reading “closed for a powder day” appear on the doors of local businesses.
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L.A. Rams Owner Stan Kroenke Becomes Largest Private Landowner in the U.S.
A December purchase of 937,000 acres of land brought Mr. Kroenke’s total holdings to 2.7 million acres, according to a new report.
Health
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3 Policy Moves Likely to Change Health Care for Older People.
Two regulatory rollbacks, along with a new A.I. experiment in Medicare, raise some worrisome questions.
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No Link Between Acetaminophen in Pregnancy and Autism, a New Study Finds.
The review looked at more than three dozen studies and found no evidence that acetaminophen increased the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children.
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For Men, How Much Alcohol Is Too Much?
Federal officials working on the new dietary guidelines had considered limiting men to one drink daily. The final advice was only that everyone should drink less.
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U.S. Cuts Health Aid and Ties It to Funding Pledges by African Governments.
The Trump administration has signed $11 billion in agreements with African nations, in deals tied to foreign policy goals.
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Kaiser Permanente Settles Medicare Fraud Claims for $556 Million.
The Justice Department and whistle-blowers accused the major health insurer of overbilling the government for about $1 billion under the private plans.
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Trump Cuts $2 Billion in Federal Funding for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services.
Notices went out late Tuesday to more than 2,000 programs nationwide that will be affected by budget slashing at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
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C.D.C. Brings Back Hundreds of Suspended Workplace Safety Employees.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. placed about 90 percent of the roughly 1,000 employees of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health on administrative leave last April.
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Initial Obamacare Enrollment Drops by 1.4 Million.
That number could increase significantly as more consumers are faced with higher bills brought on by expiring premium subsidies.
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Medical Groups Will Try to Block Childhood Vaccine Recommendations.
The groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, say the C.D.C.’s revised vaccine schedule is not based on scientific evidence and will harm the public.
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’Shrooms Lead the Pack in Psychedelic Medicine, but Rollout Is Bumpy.
Psilocybin-assisted therapy is legal in three states, but access has so far been limited and expensive.
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F.D.A. Decisions on Abortion Pill Were Based on Science, New Analysis Finds.
A study of more than 5,000 pages of agency documents on mifepristone over 12 years found that agency leaders almost always followed the evidence-based recommendations of scientists.
Well
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Family
Mind
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Times Insider
Corrections
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No Corrections: Jan. 19, 2026.
No corrections appeared in print on Monday, Jan. 19, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: Chim Chim Cher-ee! Sweeps Stage a Comeback in London.
Quotation of the Day for Monday, January 19, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: Breathing New Life Into the Oboe.
Quotation of the Day for Sunday, January 18, 2026.
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No Corrections: Jan. 18, 2026.
No corrections appeared in print on Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: She Wants to Die. Will Canada Let Her?
Quotation of the Day for Saturday, January 17, 2026.
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Corrections: Jan. 17, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: In Bitter Winter Freeze, Russia Focuses on Wiping Out the Heat.
Quotation for the Day for Friday, January 16, 2026.
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Corrections: Jan. 16, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Friday, Jan. 16, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: Greenlanders Shocked, Angry, Confused and, Most of All, Scared.
Quotation of the Day for Thursday, January 15, 2026.
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Corrections: Jan. 15, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: Why a Good Groundhog Is Hard to Find.
Quotation of the Day for January 14, 2026.
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Corrections: Jan. 14, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: His Weapon Against Russia’s Classroom Militarism: A Camera.
Quotation of the Day for Tuesday, January 13, 2026.
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Corrections: Jan. 13, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026.
The Learning Network
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What’s Going On in This Picture? | Jan. 26, 2026.
Look closely at this image, stripped of its caption, and join the moderated conversation about what you and other students see.
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What Teenagers Are Saying About the Pressure to Be Perfect.
Students react to a guest essay about how the quest for flawlessness is harming society.
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Do Your Parents Ever Play Favorites?
Research says that favoritism is common — with effects that can last a lifetime.
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Failed Experiment?
Tell us a story, real or made up, that is inspired by this image.
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Word of the Day: panacea.
This word has appeared in 121 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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What’s Going On in This Graph? | Jan. 21, 2026.
How does life expectancy vary by state and country?
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Is It OK to Alter Photos of Yourself to Look Better Online?
What are your thoughts on using photo editing tools, filters and artificial intelligence image generators to improve your appearance?
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New Dietary Guidelines.
Why was this image in the news recently? What is it communicating?
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Word of the Day: autonomous.
This word has appeared in 378 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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Dance Moves.
Do you like to dance? What are your favorite moves?
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Word of the Day: puerile.
This word has appeared in 27 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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Would You Ever Want to Explore Antarctica?
Two Times journalists are on a scientific expedition to the coldest, iciest continent on Earth. Would you want to join them? What questions would you like to ask?
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Awards Season.
Do you watch awards shows like the Golden Globes? Why do you think fewer young people have been tuning in?
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Word of the Day: skein.
This word has appeared in eight articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
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Weekly Student News Quiz: U.S. Military Raid, ICE Shooting, Golden Globes.
Have you been paying attention to current events recently? See how many of these 10 questions you can get right.
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What Is Your Reaction to the Fatal ICE Shooting in Minneapolis?
Protests spread across the country this past weekend after a federal agent shot and killed Renee Nicole Good. What are you thinking, feeling and wondering in this moment?
Gameplay
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Wordle Review No. 1,676.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 688.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026.
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Connections Companion No. 954.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026.
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Spelling Bee Forum.
Feeling stuck on today’s puzzle? We can help.
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Comes to Light.
Find your “aha!” moment in Peter Gorman’s puzzle.
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Wordle Review No. 1,675.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Monday, Jan. 19, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 687.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Monday, Jan. 19, 2026.
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Connections Companion No. 953.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Monday, Jan. 19, 2026.
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Use Your Words.
Rena Cohen’s first Sunday puzzle gives something to everyone.
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Strands Sidekick No. 686.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026.
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Wordle Review No. 1,674.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026.
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Connections Companion No. 952.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Sunday, Jan. 18, 2026.
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Quaint Contraction.
Adam Aaronson’s tough themeless puzzle will get your head spinning.
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Connections Companion No. 951.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 685.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026.
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Wordle Review No. 1,673.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026.
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Do Some Cleaning.
Kyle Dolan opens our solving weekend.
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Connections Companion No. 950.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Friday, Jan. 16, 2026
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Wordle Review No. 1,672.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Friday, Jan. 16, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 684.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Friday, Jan. 16, 2026.
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Visible Sign of Hard Work.
Wendy L. Brandes and Barbara Lin make their collaboration debut in the New York Times Crossword.
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Connections Companion No. 949.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 683.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026.
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Wordle Review No. 1,671.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026.
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Historic Stretch.
Joseph Gangi comes out on top.
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Wordle Review No. 1,670.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026.
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Connections Companion No. 948.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026.
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Strands Sidekick No. 682.
Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026.
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I’m in Trouble!
Nate Hall makes a world-shaking debut.
En español
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¿La leche entera es más sana para los niños?
No hay un estudio contundente que pruebe que la leche entera contribuye a la obesidad en los niños. Pero aquellos con sobrepeso podrían optar por opciones bajas en grasa.
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Cómo dejar de comprar cosas que no necesitas.
Reducir las compras impulsivas hará que sea más fácil ordenar tu casa.
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La cruda realidad de los medicamentos para perder peso: tal vez los necesites de por vida.
Muchas personas que recurren a estos medicamentos no quieren hacerlo a largo plazo. Pero las investigaciones han demostrado repetidamente que dejar los fármacos significa volver a subir de peso.
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5 ejercicios para aliviar el dolor y evitar lesiones.
Este mes de enero, encuentra una nueva rutina de ejercicios para moverte con más facilidad.
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Así es la estrategia del movimiento MAGA para apoderarse de la televisión en EE. UU.
Bajo el mandato de Trump, la Comisión Federal de Comunicaciones ha usado poderes reguladores oscuros para tomar medidas contra cadenas de televisión. Algunos conservadores están contraatacando.
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¿Por qué mi tolerancia al alcohol disminuye con la edad?
No te lo estás imaginando: las resacas sí son peores, la cabeza sí duele más. Cuando el cuerpo envejece, gestiona el alcohol de forma diferente.
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Los mejores deportes para la longevidad.
Todas las formas de ejercicio ayudan a vivir más tiempo, pero algunas actividades traen beneficios adicionales.
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Palabra del día: ‘panacea’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 121 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Día 5: agenda estas 5 citas médicas para proteger tu cerebro.
¿Cuándo fue la última vez que te mediste la presión arterial? Hoy te proponemos una lista para mantenerte sano en cuerpo y mente.
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Palabra del día: ‘autonomous’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 378 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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¿Qué tan saludable es el aceite de oliva?
Los estudios sugieren que consumir aceite de oliva puede ayudar a prevenir múltiples enfermedades, sobre todo cuando se consume como parte de una dieta mediterránea+
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Día 4: prueba una actividad para agudizar tu mente.
Probar cosas nuevas puede ayudar a aumentar tu reserva cognitiva. Hoy te proponemos salir a un museo o entrar a un círculo de lectura.
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6 formas de despertar el deseo sexual.
Los expertos dicen que programar el sexo está bien, pero hay formas aún más eficaces de cultivar la intimidad.
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Palabra del día: ‘puerile’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 27 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Día 3: prueba un entrenamiento para estimular tu cerebro.
Para fortalecer tu cerebro, el ejercicio es esencial. Hoy te ayudaremos a encontrar una nueva rutina.
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¿Empiezas el año con la cabeza en la luna?
Te damos unos consejos para ayudarte a recuperar la concentración.
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Palabra del día: ‘skein’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en ocho artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Una rutina de ejercicio para mejorar tu vida diaria.
El entrenamiento funcional imita los movimientos que necesitas para las tareas cotidianas. Te decimos cómo empezar.
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Día 2: elige alimentos para la mente.
Algunos nutrientes son particularmente beneficiosos para la salud del cerebro. Hoy te enseñaremos cómo consumir más de ellos.
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¿Aprender un nuevo idioma puede evitar la demencia?
Las investigaciones sugieren que las personas bilingües disfrutan de algunos beneficios cognitivos en etapas tardías de la vida, pero probablemente se requiera algo más que unas cuantas clases de español a los 60 años.
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Venezuela libera a otros 24 presos políticos, según un grupo de derechos humanos.
Desde que un gobierno interino inició las excarcelaciones la semana pasada, al menos 41 personas han quedado en libertad, según Foro Penal.
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Palabra del día: ‘abstruse’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 15 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
América Latina
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El mayor reto de Venezuela no es el petróleo, es llevar comida a la mesa.
Las turbulencias económicas tras la incursión de EE. UU. amenazan ahora con agravar una crisis humanitaria que ha durado años en Venezuela, donde según una encuesta más del 70 por ciento de la población ya vive en la pobreza.
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‘Vengan a ayudarnos’: los incendios de Chile causan al menos 16 muertes.
Un alcalde suplicó ayuda al gobierno nacional mientras las llamas destruían barrios enteros en la sureña región del Biobío.
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¿Cuba puede sobrevivir sin el petróleo de Venezuela?
El presidente Trump detuvo los envíos de petróleo venezolano a Cuba, y los expertos afirman que se avecina un desastre. El petróleo alimenta su red eléctrica y, sin suministros alternativos, el país se sumirá en una prolongada oscuridad.
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Historia de dos reuniones: Trump prefiere el petróleo a la democracia.
El respaldo de Trump a una partidaria de Maduro frente a una defensora de la democracia sugiere que su objetivo en el país es crear una fuente de petróleo y luego, quizá, una transición democrática.
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Tras la llamada con Trump, Petro aumenta la presión sobre los rebeldes acusados de narcotráfico.
Los expertos afirman que la determinación del presidente de Colombia de desmantelar al ELN es un reflejo tanto de las exigencias de Trump como de la frustración interna por su anterior gestión de los grupos armados.
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La medalla del Nobel se ha vendido antes por millones de dólares.
El Comité del Nobel ha dicho que el premio no puede transferirse, pero la medalla se ha vendido en algunas subastas a lo largo de la historia del premio.
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Cuba recibe los restos de 32 ciudadanos que murieron en los ataques de EE. UU. en Venezuela.
Las personas fallecidas formaban parte del equipo de seguridad del dirigente venezolano depuesto, Nicolás Maduro.
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El comité del Nobel recibe críticas en Noruega mientras Machado corteja a Trump.
Los intentos de la líder de la oposición venezolana de compartir su premio con el presidente de EE. UU. han hecho tambalear la fe de algunos noruegos en su emblemática herramienta de poder blando.
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EE. UU. presiona a México para que fuerzas estadounidenses combatan a los cárteles.
El gobierno de Donald Trump está intensificando la presión sobre el gobierno mexicano para que permita a fuerzas militares atacar laboratorios de fentanilo, según funcionarios estadounidenses.
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Diosdado Cabello, la pieza incómoda en la transición política en Venezuela.
Cabello, ministro del Interior de Venezuela, está acusado por fiscales estadounidenses de narcotráfico y vinculado a la represión en su país, pero sigue siendo una figura poderosa.
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EE. UU. se esfuerza por vender el petróleo de Venezuela, su antiguo adversario.
Los funcionarios estadounidenses mediaron en la venta de petróleo venezolano por valor de cientos de millones de dólares para estabilizar la economía del país tras capturar a su presidente.
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Así se gestaron las entrevistas del Times con Gustavo Petro.
Los reporteros de The New York Times esperaron más de ocho horas para hablar con el presidente Gustavo Petro, quien, como se vio después, tenía otra conversación importante entre manos.
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Venezuela manda un enviado a Washington en un momento de distensión.
Se espera que el enviado del gobierno interino llegue a Estados Unidos el mismo día en que Trump tiene previsto reunirse con la líder de la oposición, María Corina Machado.
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Venezuela anunció la liberación de presos políticos. Los familiares siguen esperando.
Cientos de familias esperan que sus seres queridos sean liberados por el gobierno venezolano, que ha dicho muy poco sobre quiénes serían excarcelados y cuándo.
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Esperanza y frustración en Venezuela ante posible amnistía política.
La dirigencia interina del país sudamericano y el presidente Trump dijeron que habría liberaciones de presos políticos, pero están tardando en llegar.
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Delcy Rodríguez recibe ayuda de tropas de EE. UU. para recuperar un buque petrolero.
Se trata del primer caso conocido públicamente de cooperación militar entre los países desde la captura del presidente Nicolás Maduro.
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Trump hace temblar la política de América Latina.
Las distintas reacciones de los países latinoamericanos a la incursión de EE. UU. en Venezuela muestran cómo el gobierno de Trump está alterando el continente.
Ciencia y Tecnología
Cultura
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Jodie Foster: una ganadora del Óscar estadounidense en París.
En “Vida privada”, la actriz asume su primer papel protagonista en solitario en el que habla francés con fluidez, pero su conexión francesa se remonta a la infancia.
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Es ‘Juego de tronos’, pero no como lo conoces.
Mientras que ‘Juego de tronos’ y ‘La Casa del dragón’ se caracterizan por su inmensidad, ‘El caballero de los Siete Reinos’ es la primera prueba de si la fórmula funcionará a una escala más humana.
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Su vida era un sueño de abolengo. Se derrumbó en un momento.
Born into exceptional privilege, Belle Burden had it all: love, money, family. Then her marriage fell apart.
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Un proyecto independiente rescata la historia de MTV y sus clips.
El sitio no oficial MTV Rewind ha recreado la era clásica de la cadena, reuniendo miles de clips. El desarrollador describe la plataforma como una respuesta a las recomendaciones impulsadas por algoritmos.
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Un nuevo videojuego simula un centro de ciberestafas.
El juego “Blood Money: Lethal Eden” aprovecha una creciente ansiedad en China al recrear las experiencias de personas traficadas para dedicarse a la estafa.
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Cero presión: su trabajo es resucitar ‘Star Wars’
Lucasfilm apuesta por la visión y pulcritud de Shawn Levy, director de “Deadpool & Wolverine” y productor de “Stranger Things”, para la nueva entrega de la famosa saga.
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BTS está de vuelta. ¿Dónde estaban?
Las superestrellas del k-pop harán una gira colosal de regreso: 79 conciertos en cinco continentes en 11 meses. Pero ¿por qué han estado ausentes tanto tiempo?
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Entre bastidores con los ganadores de los Globos de Oro.
Rose Byrne, Owen Cooper, Seth Rogen, Teyana Taylor y otros famosos que fueron galardonados en esta edición de los premios hablan sobre sus proyectos.
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Lo más destacado de los Globos de Oro 2026.
El thriller de acción ‘Una batalla tras otra’ y la miniserie de Netflix ‘Adolescencia’ se llevaron cuatro premios cada una, incluidos los máximos galardones de sus respectivas categorías.
Estados Unidos
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La lucha de Trump con Minnesota va más allá de la migración.
El estado encarna un ideal cívico que el gobierno de Washington quiere desacreditar.
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Ni Trump ni Machado obtuvieron lo que querían con el intercambio de la medalla del Nobel.
El presidente de EE. UU. tiene la medalla de María Corina Machado, pero no se le reconoce como laureado del premio. Machado no obtuvo el respaldo de Trump para convertirse en presidenta de Venezuela.
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La agencia de aviación de EE. UU. alerta actividad militar sobre océanos de América Latina.
Los siete avisos a los aviadores abarcaban zonas del océano Pacífico colindantes con México, Colombia, Ecuador y Panamá. Permanecerán vigentes hasta el 17 de marzo.
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Una exsenadora es demandada por tener una relación con un miembro de su escolta.
Kyrsten Sinema fue acusada ante un tribunal federal de mantener un romance con un miembro casado de su equipo de seguridad.
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¿Renee Good tenía la obligación de cumplir las órdenes del agente del ICE?
El agente pidió a Good que saliera de su coche antes de dispararle. Expertos jurídicos dijeron que los agentes migratorios pueden tener autoridad para dar esas órdenes, pero no siempre.
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El director de la CIA se reúne con Delcy Rodríguez en Caracas.
La visita de alto nivel reforzó el mensaje de Trump de que considera al gobierno encargado como el mejor camino hacia la estabilidad de Venezuela a corto plazo.
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Trump impulsa el mensaje de ‘inmunidad absoluta’ para agentes del ICE.
Desde la muerte de Renee Good en Mineápolis, la Casa Blanca ha respaldado la fuerza letal, pese a que las normas internas del ICE la reservan para situaciones extremas.
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Las fuerzas estadounidenses incautan un sexto buque petrolero vinculado a Venezuela.
La Guardia Costera de EE. UU. abordó e incautó el petrolero de bandera rusa, previamente llamado Veronica, en una operación realizada antes del amanecer en el Caribe.
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Las universidades chinas suben en las clasificaciones mundiales; las de EE. UU. retroceden.
Harvard sigue dominando, aunque ha caído al puesto 3 en una lista que mide el rendimiento académico. Otras universidades estadounidenses se rezagan con respecto a sus homólogas mundiales.
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Un agente federal dispara a un hombre en Mineápolis y las protestas aumentan.
El agente disparó a un hombre venezolano que se resistía a ser detenido, dijo un funcionario. Manifestantes y fuerzas del orden se enfrentaron durante horas.
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Migrantes venezolanos piden a un tribunal restablecer su Estatus de Protección Temporal.
El gobierno de Trump ha puesto fin a las protecciones del TPS para unos 600.000 migrantes venezolanos, parte de su esfuerzo por frenar las vías de acceso para que permanezcan en EE. UU.
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El ciberataque en Venezuela demostró las capacidades de EE. UU.
Los senadores del Comité de Servicios Armados tienen previsto formular preguntas sobre la operación de Caracas en una audiencia de confirmación del Comando Cibernético de EE. UU.
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Lo que está pasando en Washington.
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La ofensiva migratoria impulsa una resistencia local, de Los Ángeles a Mineápolis.
Entre chats, silbatos y patrullajes, vecinos y organizaciones se coordinan para vigilar la presencia del ICE y expresar su rechazo a las redadas en sus comunidades.
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Trump no necesitaba autorización para enviar tropas a Venezuela, según un memorando del Departamento de Justicia.
El documento ofrece un panorama detallado de la justificación legal del gobierno de Estados Unidos para la incursión militar en territorio venezolano a principios de enero.
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Ante la presión para investigar a la viuda de la víctima del ICE, 6 fiscales renunciaron.
El fiscal federal Joseph Thompson fue uno de los que renunciaron mientras el departamento de Justicia trataba de examinar los supuestos vínculos de la mujer con grupos activistas.
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El FBI catea el domicilio de una periodista del Washington Post.
La medida, parte de una investigación sobre revelaciones de información clasificada, es extremadamente inusual.
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Trump es abucheado en una visita a una fábrica de Ford y responde con un gesto obsceno.
Un vocero de la Casa Blanca dijo que el presidente “dio una respuesta apropiada e inequívoca”.
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Los Clinton se niegan a declarar en el caso Epstein y se arriesgan a estar en desacato.
La pareja intensificó su batalla con el representante James Comer, presidente del Comité de Supervisión, quien dijo que presentaría una moción para acusarlos de desacato al Congreso.
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Trump dice que Cuba ya no recibirá petróleo ni dinero de Venezuela.
El presidente pidió a Cuba que considere hacer un trato con EE. UU. pero no queda claro qué puede obtener de la isla el país más poderoso del mundo.
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Un abogado que Maduro no contrató es expulsado de su caso.
La semana pasada se presentó un abogado que decía representar al presidente destituido de Venezuela, y afirmó actuar a petición de personas cercanas al exmandatario.
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Trump dice que Renee Good fue ‘irrespetuosa’ con las fuerzas del orden.
El presidente ha dado a entender que la mujer, que murió abatida a tiros a manos de un agente del ICE, tuvo un comportamiento cuestionable.
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Ciudadanos de EE. UU. se alistan para proteger a sus padres indocumentados.
En medio de una ofensiva del ICE en su región, una reclutadora de la Guardia Nacional de Oregón ofrece a ciudadanos estadounidenses una vía para resguardar a sus padres migrantes.
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EE. UU. usó una aeronave pintada como un avión civil para atacar una embarcación en el Caribe.
Incluso aceptando la afirmación del gobierno de Trump de que existe un conflicto armado con presuntos narcotraficantes, las leyes de la guerra prohíben la “perfidia”.
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Fiscales federales abren una investigación contra el presidente de la Reserva Federal de EE. UU.
La investigación, que se dice que está enfocada en las renovaciones de la sede de la Reserva Federal en Washington, representa una intensificación en la campaña de presión de Trump sobre Jerome Powell.
Estilos de Vida
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El regreso a 2016: un anhelo que expone lo que pasa en internet.
Una tendencia en redes despertó nostalgia en los usuarios, pero los recuerdos compartidos apuntan a algo más.
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¿Qué es la ‘salud metabólica’ y por qué es importante?
La definición es complicada, pero los efectos de una mala salud metabólica son claros y pueden causar estragos en el organismo.
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No escuches las críticas. Cómprale un cochecito a tu perro.
Tal vez la gente se burle de cómo elijo transportar a mi mascota, pero cambió su vida y me hizo mejor persona.
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Por favor, engáñame.
¿Por qué seguía fantaseando que atrapaba a mi novio en la cama con otra mujer?
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Cómo evitar problemas estomacales cuando viajas.
Con un poco de planificación —qué comer, qué beber y qué llevar— puedes disminuir las probabilidades de sufrir diarrea del viajero, intoxicación leve y náuseas en el trayecto.
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Más allá de las lagartijas: prueba más ejercicios inspirados en animales.
Los ejercicios que imitan los movimientos de algunos animales parecen a primera vista un poco tontos. Pero, ¿son eficaces?
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Esta liga de fútbol requiere kilos de más y sentido del humor.
Man v Fat, una liga de fútbol fundada en el Reino Unido hace una década, se está expandiendo a los Estados Unidos, y ha traído a sus jugadores beneficios contra el exceso de peso y la soledad masculina.
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Los atuendos de la alfombra roja de Globos de Oro.
Selena Gomez, Timothée Chalamet y las estrellas de ‘Más que rivales’ fueron algunas de las celebridades que llegaron a la ceremonia anual con mucho estilo.
Mundo
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Lo que hay que saber sobre los vínculos de Hizbulá con Venezuela.
El secretario de Estado Marco Rubio dijo que el país sudamericano era una plataforma regional para la influencia iraní y acusó a las autoridades de albergar al grupo militante libanés.
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Hay al menos 21 muertos en un choque de trenes en España.
La colisión sucedió tras descarrilar los vagones traseros de un tren en el sur del país.
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Europa se plantea respuestas drásticas a las amenazas de Trump hacia Groenlandia.
Los países europeos dependen de Estados Unidos para la seguridad de la OTAN, lo que limita sus opciones. Su respuesta más contundente podrían ser represalias con su propia “bazuca” comercial.
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Maduro está en Brooklyn, pero en la ‘Little Caracas’ de Madrid los exiliados siguen esperando.
La mayor diáspora de venezolanos del mundo fuera de América vive en España. Muchos celebraron la captura de Nicolás Maduro y ahora se adaptan a la idea de que los aliados del régimen siguen a cargo.
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Julio Iglesias niega las acusaciones de abuso sexual de dos exempleadas.
El cantante dijo que las acusaciones eran “absolutamente falsas” en un comunicado emitido luego de que la fiscalía española abriera una investigación.
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Un reto para la salud de tu cerebro.
Cuanto más caótico parece el mundo, más importante se vuelve cuidar de uno mismo.
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Mineápolis ‘parece una ocupación militar’
El presidente Trump ha enviado agentes del ICE a ciudades de todo Estados Unidos.
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Irán alista su primera ejecución ligada a las protestas, mientras Trump advierte represalias.
Organizaciones de derechos humanos y familiares dicen que el país planea la primera ejecución de un manifestante opositor durante la más reciente ola de protestas.
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Dinamarca, Groenlandia y EE. UU. conversan en medio de las amenazas de Trump.
El objetivo de la discusión era enfocarse en el deseo del presidente Trump de adquirir la isla. Fue la primera reunión entre los tres gobiernos para discutir el tema.
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Todos quieren el Ártico.
El presidente Trump quiere anexionarse Groenlandia. Analizamos la lucha por otro territorio del Ártico para comprenderlo mejor.
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La carrera por dominar la última frontera en el Ártico.
Durante décadas, un archipiélago ártico llamado Svalbard ha sido un inusual refugio de cooperación internacional. Esos días se terminaron.
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En la selva de Birmania se esconde una poderosa industria de estafas.
Bandas de criminales chinos operan centros dedicados a extraer millones de dólares de víctimas alrededor del mundo.
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Irán enfrenta una de sus represiones más mortíferas bajo un apagón informativo.
Con internet y líneas telefónicas bloqueadas, videos y relatos que logran salir del país apuntan a un operativo letal contra las protestas. Fuentes y organizaciones manejan cifras que podrían rondar los 3000 muertos.
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Trump insta a que continúen las protestas contra el gobierno de Irán.
El presidente estadounidense ha amenazado con intervenir militarmente en favor de los manifestantes si Irán utiliza la fuerza letal.
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Julio Iglesias es acusado por dos exempleadas de agresión sexual.
La fiscalía española investiga las denuncias de las mujeres, que trabajaron para el cantante en República Dominicana y las Bahamas.
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Trump tiene grandes planes para el petróleo venezolano, pero la realidad es otra.
La fijación del presidente de EE. UU. con el petróleo de Venezuela plantea la cuestión de cuánto vale realmente el “dominio energético” hoy en día.
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No es buena idea meterse con la Reserva Federal.
Si el presidente Donald Trump logra finalmente influir en las decisiones del banco central de EE. UU., el mundo sufrirá las consecuencias.
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El Reino Unido va tras X por las imágenes sexualizadas de Grok.
El regulador británico Ofcom investiga al chatbot de Musk tras la difusión de imágenes ilegales.
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