Essay
Why I Left the Washington Post
Owner Jeff Bezos wants to transform the Opinions section of the paper, where I worked for forty years. After the publisher killed my column disagreeing with that move—it appears here in full—I decided to quit.
By Ruth Marcus
Mirra Andreeva Is Just Getting Started
Pro tennis has shifted away from teen queens, but the seventeen-year-old has joined the ranks of her idols and toppled them.
Books
What Made the Irish Famine So Deadly
The Great Hunger was a modern event, shaped by the belief that the poor are the authors of their own misery and that the market must be obeyed at all costs.
By Fintan O'Toole
Crossword
The Mini Crossword: Thursday, March 13, 2025
Babies born in early August, astrologically: four letters.
By Mollie Cowger
Q. & A.
Why John Mearsheimer Thinks Donald Trump Is Right on Ukraine
And that the West has misunderstood Vladimir Putin.
By Isaac Chotiner
Screening Room
The Maddening Disconnect of Phone Therapy in “Happy to Help You,” featuring Amy Sedaris
Jeremy Beiler’s short film follows a mental-health volunteer’s unravelling after a caller gets under his skin.
The Lede
The Felling of the U.S. Forest Service
The Trump Administration has cut two thousand workers, making it harder for the service to fight wildfires and repair storm damage across the country.
By Peter Slevin
Crossword
The Crossword: Wednesday, March 12, 2025
Wine quality that’s sampled by sniffing: five letters.
By Patrick Berry
On Television
How “Severance” Makes a Fetish of the Office
In its second season, the show continues to indict the corporate workplace while secretly longing for it.
By Katy Waldman
Deep State Diaries
Inside the DOGE Threat to Social Security
A day in the life of a claims rep for America’s largest government program.
By E. Tammy Kim
Letter from Sweden
Zyn and the New Nicotine Gold Rush
White snus pouches were designed to help Swedish women quit cigarettes. They’ve become a staple for American dudes.
By Carrie Battan
The New Yorker Interview
We Might Have to “Shut Down the Country”
Anthony Romero, the A.C.L.U.’s executive director, talks about what he thinks could happen if the Trump Administration defies the authority of the courts.
By David Remnick