My escort was a young man with a Slavic accent who had been hired to get me through airport customs in case I was flagged by Israeli border agents. “Rachel, you are going to love it here,” he said to
I met Eustace Conway through his little brother Judson, who is a young cowboy and a very good friend of mine. I used to work with Judson Conway on a ranch out in Wyoming. This was some years ago. Juds
The other day, Johnny Knoxville came across a relic from his past buried in a drawer at home. “I found a packet of those things at the house,” he said. “What do you call it? I can't remember what they
Credits Joe Zadeh is a writer based in Newcastle. On a damp and cloudy afternoon on February 15, 1894, a man walked through Greenwich Park in East London. His
Igor Dyatlov was a tinkerer, an inventor, and a devotee of the wilderness. Born in 1936, near Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg), he built radios as a kid and loved
During the final weeks of the Trump Administration, a senior official on the National Security Council sat at his desk in the Eisenhower Executive Office
F or the first 20 years of my working life I wrote for a living; mostly for television and well enough to earn the occasional accolade to put in a frame or a
Draw me your map of utopia and I’ll tell you your tragic flaw. In 10 years of political reporting I’ve met a lot of intense, oddly dressed people with very
IN APRIL, when Joe Biden announced that he would restore US funding for The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), which provides education, health
On May 9, 2001, Steven M. Greer took the lectern at the National Press Club, in Washington, D.C., in pursuit of the truth about unidentified flying objects.
Egill Bjarnason has been Hakai Magazine ’s go-to writer on all things Iceland since 2017. Bjarnason, an Icelander, has introduced readers to the small island
Bull dowsing a client’s home (Photos: Tony Luong) Even today, finding water underground can be a gamble. You may search the landscape for clues, for a valley,
Norrinda Brown Hayat and Fareed Hayat on their patio. Photo: Photograph by Kendall Bessent for New York Magazine When it came time to relocate from near D.C. to the New York tristate area, Fareed Haya
Subscriber Only Sign in or Subscribe Now for audio version What ever happened to machines taking over the world? What was once an object of intense concern now
Let our journalists help you make sense of the noise: Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily newsletter and get a recap of news that matters. Click the highlighted
On one of those steel-skied Manhattan winter mornings, when it seems like the city is encased by a slow-moving ironclad, I was sitting in the back seat of a
T owards the end of a conversation dwelling on some of the deepest metaphysical puzzles regarding the nature of human existence, the philosopher Galen Strawson
“Tradition demands that there is no gap between kings.” – Terry Pratchett They suspected that he was British[ X ], that he was Yakuza[ X ], that he laundered
Magazine How the hunt for the world's most notorious terrorist actually went down—as told by the people inside the room. Illustrations by Max-o-Matic By GARRETT
Series: The Insurrection The Effort to Overturn the Election ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our
After more than a decade of blistering growth, most people still don’t get cryptocurrency. Bitcoin is the best performing asset of the last decade by a huge margin and yet everyone from the mainstream
O n Sept. 7, 2013, on a long, straight avenue that runs across the bustling downtown of Liberia’s capital, Monrovia, street hawkers peered at the spectacle. Guests sweltered on packed rows of plastic
“There was a targeted assassination program in Yemen. I was running it. We did it.” Cradling an AK-47 and sucking a lollipop, the former American Green Beret
One of Trump’s midterm rallies. Photo: Mark Peterson/Redux The year is 2019. California’s new governor, Gavin Newsom , recently elected on a platform that
A sprawling tactical industry is teaching American civilians how to fight like Special Ops forces. By preparing for violence at home, are they calling it into being? 1. ‘Our Numbers Grow Every Year’ O
Brendan Pattengale Photo Illustrations by Brendan Pattengale | Maps by La Tigre Images above: Glaciers from the Vatnajökull ice cap, in Iceland Brendan Pattengale is a photographer who explores how co
A t age 18, K., like almost all Israelis, began his mandatory army service. “This was my way to give back to society and defend my country,” he says. “I was one
Mount Vernon residents had alleged abuse by the police for years. But there was no viable recourse. Benedict Evans This article is a partnership between Esquire
A t first, Ahmad Muaddamani was a distant voice coming through my computer speakers: a fragile whisper from a hidden basement. When I made contact with him on
Surviving Crypto Winter — Part Three: — Why Privacy Coins Will Rule the Next Bull Run February 23rd 2019 9,803 reads @daniel-jeffries Daniel Jeffries I am an
Surviving Crypto Winter — Part Two: Blockstack and the Great Pendulum of History January 2nd 2019 3,648 reads @daniel-jeffries Daniel Jeffries I am an author,
Daniel Jeffries Jan 1 Welcome to part one of my new series Surviving Crypto Winter , where I profile companies and projects that have a shot at getting through
Prologue 1 The New Frontier 2 Becoming Family 3 Reëducated 4 The Misfortune 5 Graduated Epilogue Subscribe >> A Reporter at Large Inside Xinjiang’s Prison State Survivors of China’s campaign of persec
Adjust Share When the crow whisperer appeared at the side gate to Adam Florin and Dani Fisher’s house, in Oakland, California, she was dressed head to toe in
"Mark Changed The Rules": How Facebook Went Easy On Alex Jones And Other Right-Wing Figures Facebook’s rules to combat misinformation and hate speech are
She turned to me the other morning and said, “You heard of The Gateway?” It didn’t register in the moment. She continued, “It’s blowing up on TikTok.” Later on,
Joaquin Quiñonero Candela, a director of AI at Facebook, was apologizing to his audience. It was March 23, 2018, just days after the revelation that Cambridge
This article was featured in One Great Story , New York ’s reading recommendation newsletter. Sign up here to get it nightly. Photo: L. Busacca/WireImage The New York Times ’s Framing Britney Spears d
Photograph by Aaron Turner; archival image from Library of Congress Image above: Portrait of Mollie Williams (Mississippi), taken as part of the Federal Writers’ Project This article was published onl