Victor Marx, who may become the Republican nominee for governor of Colorado today, depicts himself as a karate-chopping, children-saving, hardcore pastor. None of it is reliable.
One of them is an admitted killer who uses patriotism and religion to try to gain power. The other is a comic book villain.
Halfway through the session, Denver TV news anchor Kyle Clark asked the candidate how many people he had killed. The question ...
Leaders have the dual task of reshaping the identities of their people to account for the new way of working while preserving their old skills for the moments when the machines fail.
The New York Times last week told the story of Sidharth Hariharan, a mathematics graduate student at Pittsburgh's Carnegie ...
Speaking at WSJ Opinion Live in Washington, D.C., WSJ Chief Editorial Writer Kyle Peterson discusses challenges facing the Democratic Party with American Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow, Ruy ...
So thundered Karl Marx in reference to his two sons-in-law, both of whom the miserable Marx considered useless morons, as he did most people he met. The two sons would ultimately sign suicide pacts ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Today marks the birthday of Karl Marx, the 19th-century philosopher and ...
The UN blames gangs for Haiti’s turmoil, while ignoring decades of foreign intervention and support for an unelected government that lie at the heart of the country’s continuing crisis, says RUBEN ...
Alan Feigenbaum and Deepti Shenoy present a Q&A with retired matrimonial Judge Richard Dollinger where they examine parental alienation in custody disputes and highlight the challenges courts face in ...
The remote work raises questions about the nature of labour, the role of technology, and the implications for workers’ rights and social justice. Is remote work a good thing, or does it increase ...