
The Women Who Believe That Women Should Lose the Right to Vote
Adherents to biblical patriarchy support household voting: One household, one vote — the husband’s. They say the idea is catching on.
By Vivian Yee

Adherents to biblical patriarchy support household voting: One household, one vote — the husband’s. They say the idea is catching on.
By Vivian Yee

Michael Haskell, 17, set out to make some money from his locker dives. He ended up learning about life.
By Alex Vadukul and Vincent Alban

From Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s food pyramid to online influencers, beef has become more than just a source of protein.
By Lisa Miller

Cohen Miles-Rath heard voices telling him to kill his father. After they passed, he spent years retracing the path of his delusions.
By Ellen Barry

Kaela Berg is part of a crop of working-class candidates that Democrats hope can help the party win back blue-collar voters.
By Lisa Lerer

He mastered the world of the “Epstein Class” to build great museums. Now he’s confronting the cost.
By Eli Saslow and Erin Schaff

After years of criticism and financial risk, Palantir, Anthropic and small start-ups are generating rewards from their investments in defense tech.
By Sheera Frenkel

A seven-page document, mailed by an elusive figure, has set off a court battle over the estate of Tony Hsieh, the former chief executive of Zappos.
By David Segal

A proliferation of data from wearable technology is telling people how to optimize their job performance. Is that a good thing?
By Noam Scheiber

Will Mair, who studies aging, lost almost all his research funds when the White House cracked down on Harvard. He was wholly unprepared for the upheaval that followed.
By Jenna Russell
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