Ukraine is the first streaming service war
It debuted to a burst of attention only for everyone to lose interest
Matt Purple is the online editor of The Spectator's World edition
It debuted to a burst of attention only for everyone to lose interest
Summer in broiling Washington reminds us that hard work isn’t everything
From our UK edition
The year was 2001. George W. Bush had just defeated Al Gore in the infamous hanging-gigachad presidential election from hell. The policy differences between the candidates weren’t actually that substantial, at least compared to how they often are today; what had really distinguished the campaign was its de facto referendum on the personal character of
Joe Biden, take note: you’re no Ronald Reagan
You don’t mess with the people who grow your food
As a recession looms, he signs off on more tax hikes and fees for frackers
Hunting for evidence of Republican authoritarianism in the Magic Kingdom
Defiance of pointy-headed authority is in America’s very marrow
Choking a Secret Service agent? Possible perjury? Reality is channeling ‘24’
On a beautiful day in Washington, the Supreme Court strikes down Roe v. Wade
How can he hope to make himself heard over Trump and DeSantis?
It’s a richer time in your life, when you find fulfillment in the mundane
Movies and video games didn’t cause Uvalde but the questions don’t end there
When everything is collapsing, you hit the road
From our UK edition
Washington, DC Amid the recent orgy of violence across America, it was the carjackings that finally got me. Lost amid all the mass shootings and gang slayings of late has been another wave of crime: vehicle thefts. In Washington DC, carjackings in 2021 were up by a third over 2019, while in nearby Alexandria a motorist
The New York Times says America’s battles are spreading to other countries
The Democrats’ abortion bill is unlike anything America has ever seen
America is stuck in the past, just not in the way pro-choicers think
The end of Roe could be the beginning of a revolution in how we think
Buckeye State Republicans deserved better than they got in their Senate primary