It is the most nonsensical form of municipal recycling—delivering little, if any, environmental benefit at the highest cost.

The Trump administration’s crusade against the university is unquestionably justified, but its methods may not pass muster in court.

The university says it’s cracking down on campus anti-Semitism. Instead, it’s going after a student for publicly expressing his faith.

President Trump has ensured that the civil-rights regime will no longer be a one-way lever to embed left-wing ideologies in elite institutions.


The project was flawed from the start, yet New York’s mayoral candidates aren’t proposing a realistic alternative.

The campaign against Elon Musk’s company is hardly a grassroots movement.

The South American nation’s industries became less competitive after implementing trade barriers.

A court ruled that Act 10 violates the Wisconsin constitution’s equal-protection clause—and the state’s supreme court might agree.

City Journal Podcast

Scientific research doesn’t support the claim of an “immutable” transgender identity.

A new survey finds more than half of left-wing respondents believe assassinating Donald Trump could be justified.

Protectionism makes industries less competitive.

Yunseo Chung’s descent into pro-Hamas activism reveals a tragic outcome of higher education’s fixation with racial victimhood.

A new book makes the case for considering applicants’ socioeconomic backgrounds.

In his Senate confirmation hearing, private astronaut Jared Isaacman outlined a new vision for the troubled agency.

Mayor Daniel Lurie won’t let activists hand out free drug paraphernalia on the streets anymore.

Past presidents were too afraid to withstand any pain from allowing markets to help adjust the economy.

The president’s executive order pushing the museum to start honoring American history again is a welcome step.

Governor Kathy Hochul’s proposal is marooned in budget negotiations.


The project was flawed from the start, yet New York’s mayoral candidates aren’t proposing a realistic alternative.

The campaign against Elon Musk’s company is hardly a grassroots movement.

The South American nation’s industries became less competitive after implementing trade barriers.

A court ruled that Act 10 violates the Wisconsin constitution’s equal-protection clause—and the state’s supreme court might agree.

City Journal Podcast

Scientific research doesn’t support the claim of an “immutable” transgender identity.

A new survey finds more than half of left-wing respondents believe assassinating Donald Trump could be justified.

Protectionism makes industries less competitive.

Yunseo Chung’s descent into pro-Hamas activism reveals a tragic outcome of higher education’s fixation with racial victimhood.

A new book makes the case for considering applicants’ socioeconomic backgrounds.

In his Senate confirmation hearing, private astronaut Jared Isaacman outlined a new vision for the troubled agency.

Mayor Daniel Lurie won’t let activists hand out free drug paraphernalia on the streets anymore.

Past presidents were too afraid to withstand any pain from allowing markets to help adjust the economy.

The president’s executive order pushing the museum to start honoring American history again is a welcome step.

Governor Kathy Hochul’s proposal is marooned in budget negotiations.


The project was flawed from the start, yet New York’s mayoral candidates aren’t proposing a realistic alternative.

The campaign against Elon Musk’s company is hardly a grassroots movement.

The South American nation’s industries became less competitive after implementing trade barriers.

The dean of natural and mathematical sciences emphasized the importance of diversity when looking at job candidates.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.

The campaign against Elon Musk’s company is hardly a grassroots movement.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

The RISE UPP initiative appears to be using applicants’ “commitment to diversity” as a proxy for race.

Universities have gone from arguing that science is biased to claiming that even the overhead on their massive federal research budgets must not be cut.

Jennifer Manly has been associated with over $100 million in grants over the past 20 years.

He is believed to have committed suicide after suffering severe complications from gender-transition surgery.

It’s time for the Trump administration to intervene.

An insider tells the story of the intel agency’s ideological capture.

The University of California’s program creates a stifling orthodoxy.

Trump was right to slash education contracts. He should keep going.

Intelligence officials maintained a chatroom to discuss polyamory and transgender surgeries, internal documents reveal.

Fellow-to-faculty programs have seeded academia with activists.

The dean of natural and mathematical sciences emphasized the importance of diversity when looking at job candidates.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.

The campaign against Elon Musk’s company is hardly a grassroots movement.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

The RISE UPP initiative appears to be using applicants’ “commitment to diversity” as a proxy for race.

Universities have gone from arguing that science is biased to claiming that even the overhead on their massive federal research budgets must not be cut.

Jennifer Manly has been associated with over $100 million in grants over the past 20 years.

He is believed to have committed suicide after suffering severe complications from gender-transition surgery.

It’s time for the Trump administration to intervene.

An insider tells the story of the intel agency’s ideological capture.

The University of California’s program creates a stifling orthodoxy.

Trump was right to slash education contracts. He should keep going.

Intelligence officials maintained a chatroom to discuss polyamory and transgender surgeries, internal documents reveal.

Fellow-to-faculty programs have seeded academia with activists.

The dean of natural and mathematical sciences emphasized the importance of diversity when looking at job candidates.

Congress can shut down extremist international studies centers with a pen stroke.

A tranche of internal messages exposes the school’s past hiring policies.

A network of progressive groups and militants is preparing for battle.


Podcasts
City Journal’s 10 Blocks podcast features rich conversations on public policy and culture with host Brian C. Anderson.
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City Journal Podcast




The Spotlight
After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The assassination of Brian Thompson does not call for a “conversation” about health care—it calls for a reckoning with Americans’ moral breakdown.

Much of the racial gap in homeownership is tied to rates of family formation.

Fitzgerald’s novel has lost neither its glamour nor its moral force.

On the tendency of criminals to describe their deeds using the passive mood

In an increasingly urbanized world, earthquakes threaten unprepared cities with mass destruction.

An elite law firm’s inability to promote enough minority partners exposes the unrealistic expectations of diversity mandates.

The legal profession, once a guardian of republican government, is now a force for social upheaval.

For Roger Angell, who died in May at 101, baseball was the subject of a lifetime.

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The assassination of Brian Thompson does not call for a “conversation” about health care—it calls for a reckoning with Americans’ moral breakdown.

Much of the racial gap in homeownership is tied to rates of family formation.

Fitzgerald’s novel has lost neither its glamour nor its moral force.

On the tendency of criminals to describe their deeds using the passive mood

In an increasingly urbanized world, earthquakes threaten unprepared cities with mass destruction.

An elite law firm’s inability to promote enough minority partners exposes the unrealistic expectations of diversity mandates.

The legal profession, once a guardian of republican government, is now a force for social upheaval.

For Roger Angell, who died in May at 101, baseball was the subject of a lifetime.

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.
