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Cruelty, Bigotry and Rage. What’s Not to Like?

This is what happens when the fringe becomes the mainstream (and vice versa).

© Photo Illustration by The New York Times. Source photograph: Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times; Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

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Blue Origin to Launch NASA’s ESCAPADE Mission to Mars: How to Watch

This will be the second flight of the orbital rocket from Jeff Bezos’s space company and will include a key test of whether it can land a booster stage for later reuse.

© Stephanie Plucinsky/Blue Origin, via Associated Press

NASA’s ESCAPADE Mars orbiters encapsulated in Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket at Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Oct. 31.
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Banning Social Media

More schools and governments are turning to tech bans to try to keep kids off screens. Do they work?

© Bruna Prado/Associated Press

A student handing over a cellphone at a school in Brazil.
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Josh Shapiro Knows What the Democrats Need

The Democratic Party will not return to the White House, nor reclaim Congress, until it learns to embrace centrist politicians like Pennsylvania’s governor.

© Illustration by The New York Times

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Airport Disruptions May Get Worse This Week Amid Shutdown

The fact that planes are generally less full in early November have helped to ease the impact. That will change as Thanksgiving nears.

© Nicole Craine for The New York Times

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Friday. Airlines canceled hundreds of flights each day from Friday through Sunday at airports serving major cities like Atlanta, Denver, Chicago and New York.
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Where Democrats Will Duel Next for the Party’s Future

In Michigan, Maine and many other states, primary candidates will decide the party’s direction on a host of policy issues, and ultimately whether it has a center-left or left-wing vision.

© Ryan David Brown for The New York Times

The Senate primary contest that has drawn the most attention so far is in Maine, which represents the Democratic Party’s best chance in 2026 to pick off a Republican: Senator Susan Collins.
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The Dangerous Stalemate Over Iran’s Nuclear Program

With no negotiations, no oversight and no clarity about Iran’s stock of nuclear material, many in the region fear another war with Israel is inevitable.

© Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

Demonstrators in Tehran on Tuesday marking the anniversary of the takeover of the American Embassy on Nov. 4, 1979.
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With Mortgage Rates Declining, Should You Refinance?

More than four million borrowers could potentially benefit from locking in a lower rate. Here’s what to consider.

© Mario Tama/Getty Images

The average interest rate for 30-year fixed mortgages was 6.22 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac.
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The MAHA-Fueled Rise of Natural Family Planning

A growing coalition of conservatives are speaking out against hormonal birth control, while promoting a more “natural” alternative.

© Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

Samantha Kopy teaches a virtual class on natural family planning methods.
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Mamdani, Mofongo and Rum: Democratic Squabbles Fade Away, for Now

At an annual gathering in Puerto Rico for New York’s political class, former foes of Zohran Mamdani put aside their differences and tried to get information about his inner circle.

© Erika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times

At the political gathering in San Juan, P.R., known as Somos, Zohran Mamdani got what was described as treatment befitting “one of the Beatles.”
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With a Mayor From Queens, the Borough Is Having a Moment

When Zohran Mamdani is sworn in as New York City’s 111th mayor, he will be the first with such an intimate connection to Queens.

© Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani will be New York City’s first mayor who represented Queens in elected office.
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Israeli Academics Find Themselves Isolated Despite Gaza Cease-Fire

Boycotts of Israeli universities, largely imposed in Europe, have multiplied since the start of the war and reflect Israel’s international isolation over its conduct in Gaza.

© Ramon Van Flymen/EPA, via Shutterstock

A protest in May 2024 calling for the University of Amsterdam to cut ties with Israeli institutions.
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China Suspends Export Controls on More Critical Minerals

The changes would make it easier for American firms to obtain key minerals, delivering on what the White House said the two countries had agreed to at last month’s summit.

© Reuters

People working at a tungsten factory at Zhongshan, China, in 2017.
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America Isn’t Cool Anymore

Pop culture exports have long been a potent source of American soft power. What happens when the U.S. is no longer the global capital of cool?

© Christa Jarrold

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Exercising Is the Worst

Exercise has never been fun, but our expectations for physical performance, what it means to be healthy, and what it means to age have gotten too high.

© Stephan Dybus

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Spain’s True-Crime Capital Is Fed Up

A decades-old killing in a tiny village in a northern mountain town has turned the village into a destination for true-crime enthusiasts, creating a headache for remaining residents.

The 1995 killing of Josep Montané was the third in Tor, Spain, in 15 years. A journalist was fascinated, and now the town is a destination for others who are, too.
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