Two books about the 1856 caning of a senator show how words can incite violence—and also help defeat it.
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What to read in June, including a book from Hamnet’s Maggie O’Farrell
Books of the Month: What to read in June, from a Katharine Hepburn bio-fic to the new novel from Hamnet author Maggie ...
Young men 'felt a little offside from the Trudeau agenda,' both in terms of policy and persona, said Arnold You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account.
DEAR ABBY: Eighteen months ago, I was staying with my son and his family when they had a get-together with the father of his wife, “Corrine.” Related Articles Dear Abby: I can’t forgive myself for how ...
Dear Abby: Every time we argue, this is my girlfriend’s go-to insult Dear Abby: Why do these brazen women keep showing up at funerals? Dear Abby: He might soon be my son-in-law. For now, he’s the guy ...
Trade deals around the world are being negotiated, signed and celebrated without the U.S. World leaders are looking to other sources of economic partnership as turbulent tariff policies, harsh ...
In November, two DC-related memoirs debuted on the same day with similar titles: Unfettered by Pennsylvania senator John Fetterman and Unscripted by actor Cheryl Hines, who is married to HHS Secretary ...
“This one—I never, ever want to have her as my enemy: Marjorie Taylor Greene,” said President Trump at a Georgia rally in the final weeks of the 2020 campaign. Five years later, Trump is putting those ...
As the Democratic Party grapples with losses up and down the ballot in 2024, a new report is urging Democrats to moderate their positions on identity politics and cultural issues while embracing ...
DEAR ABBY: While the saying goes “no man is an island,” I beg to differ, as I am married to one. My husband has little to no patience with anyone, family included. He has always been negative, and as ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Popular conservative radio host Michael Savage on Tuesday took to X, ...
Harvard economist Roland Fryer explains how people tend to interpret ambiguous information as confirming whatever they believed to begin with. Photo: Free to Choose Network In the 1970s, Western ...
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