The Saturday Interview

Martin Cooper, the man who made the first call on a handheld device, reflects on how the technology has changed the world—and the advances still to come.

April 14, 2023

After the Stanford episode, Ilya Shapiro sounds a warning: The threat to ‘dismantle existing structures’ is an idle one in English class. But in legal education it targets individual rights and equal treatment under the Constitution.

March 28, 2023

The original sin was monetary policy, Thomas Hoenig says, but regulators failed to heed the warning signs of a disaster in the making at SVB and elsewhere.

March 17, 2023

A new book argues that government unions have seized unaccountable power. The author, Philip Howard, plans to make the case in court.

March 3, 2023

Two of the GOP’s freshmen in Congress tell their political stories and explain why Democrats can’t take black and Hispanic voters for granted.

February 10, 2023

They bought into the progressive idea of History with a capital H, says George F. Will, but couldn’t stand to see the other side having all the fun.

February 3, 2023

Relativism gets a bum rap, this veteran academic says. The pursuit of credentials and specialization was a lot more harmful.

December 2, 2022

As the Supreme Court takes up preferences at Harvard, legal scholar David Bernstein argues that labels like ‘Hispanic’ and ‘Asian’ are completely arbitrary.

October 28, 2022

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