E. Jean Carroll Discusses Trump’s Comeuppance Since losing a civil case to the journalist, who accused him of sexual abuse and defamation, Trump has doubled down on his attacks. May 26, 2023 How Warhol Turned the Supreme Court Justices Into Art Critics Justice Elena Kagan’s dissent reads as strenuously as a vintage piece by, say, Clement Greenberg, slamming Harold Rosenberg. May 25, 2023 Title 42 Is Gone, but What Are Asylum Seekers Supposed to Do Now? It’s hard to imagine an area of federal policymaking more vexed than immigration, generally, and asylum, specifically. May 20, 2023 Congress Really Wants to Regulate A.I., but No One Seems to Know How Yet another hearing—this one with OpenAI’s Sam Altman—has come after a new technology with the possibility to fundamentally alter our lives is already in circulation. May 20, 2023 The Vanishing Acts of Vladimir Putin One of the seeming paradoxes of the Russian President is the degree to which he is at once a unitary micromanager and an absent, aloof, and often indecisive leader. May 15, 2023 A Supreme Court Ruling the Fossil-Fuel Industry Doesn’t Like Communities can now sue in state courts for compensation for the costs of climate change—something oil companies have fought against for years. May 10, 2023 How Troubling Are the Payments and Gifts to Ginni and Clarence Thomas? They’ve gone on for years and they raise serious questions about accountability at the Supreme Court. May 9, 2023 How a Cuban American Illustrator Sees This Country Today Edel Rodriguez’s new exhibition, “Apocalypso,” reflects on democracy under threat in the nation that welcomed him in his childhood. May 4, 2023 Florida’s Right Turn on Immigration Voters in other states have mobilized against severe penalties for migrants, but Florida may prove different. April 28, 2023 What’s Going On with Samuel Alito? The Justice’s objection to the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in an abortion-pill case is another catalogue of his resentments. April 26, 2023