The politics of The Rot stem from a darker time. If still angry, this book also feels sadder. Despair cannot pass without ...
The Guillermo del Toro adaptation brings unique perspective—but fails to match the depth of its source material.
As the world’s climate negotiators gather in Brazil, they must understand that the energy transition is now inevitable ...
"The leader has forbidden fleeing the freest country." A big new interview with the underground media of Kharkov for Camille ...
A heterodox tradition in economics has been a guiding light for MoneyWeek over our 25 years, says Stuart Watkins ...
Isn’t Islam inherently violent? What stopped the Islamic world having an Enlightenment? Why are some Muslims so into head-chopping? And isn’t Hamas the ...
American history, when told well, resists the tidy progressions we like to imagine for it. Two recent works -- Ken Burns and ...
Loren Goldner reviews John Marrot's "The October Revolution in Prospect and Retrospect: Interventions in Russian and Soviet History" in Insurgent Notes #7.
As investment in AI surges and valuations soar, a growing body of evidence suggests that financial speculation is outpacing productivity gains.
Gabriella Abbey, CEO of Zeera, is a regular visitor to India. The Ghana entrepreneur’s agenda spans automotive components, ...
Some stories don’t rebel loudly; they simply tilt your world until the rules stop making sense. These eight works bend convention, blur morality, and challenge certainty in ways that feel effortless.
EICMA represents the Serviceable Addressable Market—the recreational cyclists who already exist. Smart Cities represents the ...