Not dead yetNewspapers have cut their way out of crisis. More radical surgery will be needed WHATEVER happened to the death of newspapers? A year ago the end seemed near. The recession threatened to remove the advertising and readers that had not already fled to the internet. Newspapers like the San Francisco Chronicle were chronicling their own doom. America's Federal Trade Commission launched a
OpinionLeadersLetters to the editorBy InvitationCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceWorldThe world t
OpinionLeadersLetters to the editorBy InvitationCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceWorldThe world t
Old McDonald hadn't an armThe Supreme Court is poised to strike down gun controls IT HELPS to have a sympathetic plaintiff. Otis McDonald is a 76-year-old African-American grandpa. His folks were sharecroppers in Louisiana. He grew up hunting squirrels, racoons and possums. He served in the army and worked hard all his life. And now he lives in a rough part of Chicago, where teenage thugs have bro
OpinionLeadersLetters to the editorBy InvitationCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceCurrent topicsUS elections 2024War in UkraineIsrael and HamasThe World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceWorldThe world t
OpinionLeadersLetters to the editorBy InvitationCurrent topicsIsrael and HamasWar in UkraineUS elections 2024The World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceCurrent topicsIsrael and HamasWar in UkraineUS elections 2024The World Ahead 2024Climate changeCoronavirusThe world economyThe Economist explainsArtificial intelligenceWorldThe world t
TWO judges will have a big impact on the fortune of David Simon, the boss of his family's American shopping-mall firm. The first must decide a bitter dispute over the will of Mr Simon's late billionaire father, which was controversially revised only months before his death to exclude Mr Simon and two siblings in favour of a second wife. One of Mr Simon's sisters, ostensibly acting alone, launched
By fits and startsAs China and America square off in the latest round of recriminations, how bad are relations really?
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