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As Disney and Universal Celebrate Pride Month, DeSantis Declares June Faith and Family Month in Florida

As Disney World and Universal Orlando continue their annual Pride Month celebrations throughout June, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has issued a proclamation declaring June 2026 “Faith and Family Month in Florida,” highlighting a dramatically different vision for how the month should be observed. The proclamation, signed on June 8, emphasizes faith, fatherhood, family unity, and […]

The post As…

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Microsoft feud escalates as researcher drops new Windows zero-day

The long-running feud between Microsoft and security researcher Nightmare Eclipse has entered a new chapter.

Eclipse, who has spent the past several months publicly releasing unpatched Windows vulnerabilities while sparring with Microsoft over vulnerability disclosure practices, has published exploit code for a new zero-day flaw dubbed RoguePlanet.

The researcher said their exploit uses a race…

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The World Cup in an Age of Strongmen

The ball smacked the net. Germany had just scored for the fourth time in 26 minutes, brutally exposing the Brazilian squad. As I watched the match in my father’s São Paulo apartment, I heard a woman outside shriek, an understandable reaction. Ours was silence. Germany would score three more times before the referee’s merciful final whistle. Brazil—the only team to have qualified for every World…

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The American Revolution Is Not Complete

It was telling that the last pop culture sensation to tackle the American Revolution—the 2015 musical _Hamilton_ —felt that the best way to make the nation’s founding legible to modern audiences was to cast a Founding Father as a plucky immigrant. So distant was their world from ours that its creator, Lin-Manuel Miranda, seemed to think that audiences could only relate to the founding if it was…

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How Trump Made Penn Quake in Its Boots

Earlier this spring, I visited the University of Pennsylvania’s College Green. I saw smiling students innocently chatting with each other as they hurriedly walked between classes. I eavesdropped on doe-eyed high schoolers on their college tours being lectured by undergrads on the grandeur of Penn. And, upon gazing up at the stately Ben Franklin statue that sits in front of College Hall, I…

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Can Marriage Survive the Manosphere?

When the historian Stephanie Coontz published _The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap_ in 1992, it landed like a gasoline-soaked rag in the middle of that era’s burning culture wars. That was the year Vice President Dan Quayle chided the fictional news anchor Murphy Brown for having a child “out of wedlock,” and Pat Buchanan, speaking at the Republican National…

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Inside Grindavík, The Abandoned Icelandic Fishing Town That Echoes My New Novel

“We saw heaps of blackened lava, cordoned-off sinkholes, shuttered schools and playgrounds, huge gashes through rows of houses where rivers of magma had flowed,” writes Maggie O’Farrell, author of ‘Hamnet’, who unknowingly booked a trip to a settlement ravished by volcanic activity.

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Donald Trump Is Finally Cracking Up for Real

Angelo Carusone and Aaron Rupar share a distinction that we imagine many Americans would happily cede to them: They have likely watched more Donald Trump rallies, speeches, and press briefings than any other living Americans. Carusone is the chairman and president of Media Matters for America, the liberal media watchdog group; Rupar is an independent journalist who fires off dozens of posts a day…

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Once

there was smoke coiling the sky, dust and rubbish

windblown in an alley, a light rain beginning to fall,

once a black Cadillac rusted in a field of milkweed,

October snow come down over Lake Huron,

once a young man disappeared and was found

days later a hundred and fifty miles away alone

weeping near the railroad tracks in Carey, Ohio,

those thoughts, those days, consciousness…

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What Sports Gambling Is Learning From Big Tobacco

Minnesota State Senator John Marty was furious with the nonprofit National Council on Problem Gambling, so much so that he couldn’t wait until morning to fire off an angry email. “I am deeply disappointed to see this!” he wrote to an NCPG staffer one night in April 2025, after a Senate colleague shared the draft of an op-ed by Keith Whyte, NCPG’s longtime executive director and one of America’s…

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The Anti-Abortion Movement’s Alarming Control Tactics

One afternoon in March 2023, Jackie Noyola and Amy Carpenter were sitting in their favorite Houston bar, having a glass of wine, when their phones lit up with notifications of an identical email. It was from a law firm in Washington, D.C., and it was offering to represent them in a wrongful death lawsuit launched by a man called Marcus Silva.

Thinking the email must be a prank, they sent a…

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Caro Claire Burke’s Thriller Captures a Tradwife’s Quiet Discontent

In her 2001 memoir, _A Life’s Work,_ Rachel Cusk writes that “in motherhood, a woman exchanges her public significance for a range of private meanings.” Cusk’s feelings of invisibility and loneliness were met with relentless criticism. “I was accused of child-hating,” Cusk recounts, “of postnatal depression, of shameless greed, of irresponsibility, of pretentiousness, of selfishness, of…

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Declan Rice: Vogue Meets Football (And Fashion’s) Man Of The Moment

Ever since his record-breaking signing to Arsenal, midfield dynamo Declan Rice has become a star on home turf and the international stage. As the biggest tournament of all beckons, the £100 million man meets Olivia Marks to talk football, fashion and the fate of the Three Lions this summer. Photographs by Sean & Seng. Styling by Gerry O’Kane.

“I Have So Much To Say”: Model Of The Year Anok Yai Gets Real On The Fashion Industry, Fame And Facing Her Own Mortality

After a terrifying brush with death, Model of the Year Anok Yai thought her career was over. In a candid interview with Vogue’s Funmi Fetto, Anok Yai explains how she quite literally faced death in the months that followed. Read Anok's British Vogue cover interview in full, here.

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The Farmers Caught in the Middle of Trump’s Tariffs and the Iran War

Brett Neibling leaned against the door of his small office space, facing the array of computers and instruments that controlled several mechanical functions on his farm. The room was little more than an air-conditioned box, with scattered stools and a whiteboard on one wall. One of his farm dogs, a brown Labrador and known menace, idled outside the door.

His roughly 2,500-acre farm in Highland,…

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Patrick Radden Keefe’s Portrait of a Crisis-Ridden Country

On November 21, 1974, the Provisional Irish Republican Army detonated bombs in two pubs in Birmingham, England, as part of its campaign to get the British out of Ireland. Twenty-one people were killed, and nearly 200 were injured. It was at the time the deadliest attack in England since the days of V-2 rockets. The police immediately sprang into action, arrested six completely innocent Irishmen,…

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