Today’s newsletter is about the Chinese government, a biolab, and reckless handling of dangerous pathogens. No, it’s not 2020.
The Navy is losing a war of attrition — against its own bureaucracy. Not only did 2025 see the largest single-year reduction in homicide on record, but the level may now be as low as it has been since ...
Polling suggests that political partisanship influences COVID risk perception to a significant degree. Democrats are more likely to believe COVID is a significant threat and are therefore more likely ...
Euthanasia conjoined with organ harvesting just took a particularly disturbing turn in Spain, where a woman was euthanized and then had part of her face transplanted. From the Catalan News story: Vall ...
Opinion

The Morning Jolt

On the menu today: Vivek Ramaswamy is the man who is most likely to be the Republican nominee for governor of Ohio this year. There was a time, not that long ago, when he argued that Republicans like ...
Alexandra DeSanctis is a contributing writer at National Review. Susan Ostermann’s elevation would mark the first time the school has had a leader known for publicly and habitually repudiating a core ...
The Alzheimer’s Association allocated significant funding to support DEI initiatives, including offering specific financial awards for “underrepresented” individuals — and because the organization ...
Rich Charlie, Jim, and Noah discuss Don Lemon’s arrest, recent Epstein files news, and much more. The NR editors discuss the state of the political scene each week. Rich, Charlie, Michael, and Phil ...
Opinion

The Latest

The FLOTUS documentary doubles as news and redemption. The caricature that Joe Biden’s hapless image-makers engineered for the former president is about to make a comeback. The American Society of ...
Mr. Dalrymple, a retired doctor, is a contributing editor of City Journal and The New English Review. He is the author of False Positive: A Year of Error, Omission, and Political Correctness in the ...
Mayor Daniel Lurie signed an ordinance establishing a privately funded reparations program — but no major donors have stepped up.
Fourteen Korean government agencies are targeting Coupang in what critics say is a disproportionate response to a recent data breach.