Nellie Bowles: How the Lockdowns Drove Us Crazy
The former New York Times reporter explores the collective madness that washed over us in 2020, tracing the path from #MeToo to “Intifada Revolution!”
The former New York Times reporter explores the collective madness that washed over us in 2020, tracing the path from #MeToo to “Intifada Revolution!”
Plus: A listener asks the editors about the magical thinking behind the economic ideas of Modern Monetary Theory.
The ruling has nothing to do with #MeToo. It is about ensuring a fair trial—a principle that applies no matter how unsympathetic the defendant.
Plus: Tucker Carlson interviews Vladimir Putin, Rep. Ilhan Omar opposes minimum parking limits, my baby enjoys the DDR, and more...
This sets a dangerous precedent.
It is not hard to see why the jury concluded that the incident she described probably happened.
The movement's net caught a lot of men like writer Junot Diaz—ordinary jerks rather than formidable serial predators.
The torturous trial calls to mind Title IX investigations on college campuses.
It seems like an ambiguous episode that was handled appropriately.
How the weaponization of sexual misconduct allegations wrecked Florian Jaeger's life and cost his university millions
The essayist and cultural critic talked about her new book Love in the Time of Contagion, at a live event in New York City.
Last year may have been the year of the Cuomosexual, but 2021 rightly disabused people of the notion that New York's governor had their best interests at heart.
The CNN host reportedly blamed the governor's troubles on "cancel culture."
Numerous women claimed on social media that they were mistreated at YAL events and that their concerns were ignored by leadership.
The New York governor should be disqualified from the U.S. attorney general job, even without a #MeToo-ing.
Plaintiff had sufficiently alleged that the defendant didn't just create the list as a platform for others, but herself posted material about him -- though whether plaintiff ultimately prevails will depend on what discovery reveals.
The central tenet of the #MeToo movement is being memory-holed.
Remember Bill Clinton?
After failing to frame Robert Mueller, Elizabeth Warren, and others for sexual misconduct, the infamous Trumpster hoaxers tried to go after Fauci. But the woman they hired to play the victim had second thoughts.
Plus: Backlash to Amash's presidential run, new SCOTUS cases, and more...
"I'm for Biden, regardless. But still I have to come out and say this."
Why aren't TV networks grilling Biden about this?
Dean Baquet's argument for proceeding cautiously with Joe Biden but not with Brett Kavanaugh isn't very persuasive.
"We found no pattern of sexual misconduct by Biden, beyond hugs, kisses and touching that women previously said made them uncomfortable."
Under fire for refusing to support Tara Reade, Milano says she never thought #MeToo would "destroy innocent men."
A former staffer says he sexually assaulted her in 1993.
The California Court of Appeal reversed, in an interesting case about allegations of physical abuse—and claims that the allegations were themselves a form of "abuse."
"Compliments on a woman's appearance that some men, including me, might have once incorrectly thought were okay, were never okay."
The disgraced filmmaker is headed to prison.
This was supposed to be the electable alternative?
Evan Stevens Hall was essentially blackmailed by a would-be therapist. The media has hardly forgiven him.
"If 2018 was the year that the concept of 'cancel culture' went mainstream, then 2019 may be the year that cancel culture cancels itself."
The author of the provocative intellectual memoir The Problem with Everything takes on fourth-wave feminism and celebrates Gen X's "toughness."
Journalist Jonathan Kaiman is one of the least famous, least powerful men to be brought down by the #MeToo movement. A year later, the fallout continues.