Men go to Andrew Tate not to alleviate loneliness but to intensify it. The administration is incapacitating the ...
Know Your Enemy is a podcast about the American right co-hosted by Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell. Read more about it here ...
This article will appear in our upcoming Winter 2026 issue on socialism in the city. Subscribe now to receive a copy. When was the last time being on the left was fun? Even in the best of times, ...
An influx of gifted, charismatic, politically active stars have willed the WNBA into a genuine sporting attraction. Can they leverage the sport’s growing popularity into a better deal for players?
An interview with Osita Nwanevu, author of The Right of the People: Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding. Nick Serpe ▪ August 12, 2025 Constantino Brumidi's The Apotheosis of ...
In early July, the Department of Homeland Security indulged in a little art appreciation on X, where it posted a Thomas Kinkade painting, Morning Pledge, for its 2.6 million followers to admire.
Penguin Press, 2025, 768 pp. In a series of lectures on the philosophy of history delivered in the 1820s, around the time Spain’s colonies in the Western Hemisphere were declaring independence, Georg ...
An interview with Dara Lind and Omar Jadwat on immigration policy in the second Trump administration. Patrick Iber ▪ Spring 2025 Buses of migrants from the Texas border arrive in New York City ...
Matt and Sam revisit J.D. Vance’s 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy to try to understand the Republican vice-presidential nominee. Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell ▪ August 12, 2024 J.D. Vance at a ...
Matt and Sam are joined by historian Suzanne Schneider to discuss how Israeli illiberalism is inspiring the global right. Matthew Sitman and Sam Adler-Bell ▪ July 19, 2024 Viktor Orbán and ...
Matt and Sam are joined by Neil J. Young to discuss his new book, Coming Out Republican: A History of the Gay Right. In this special Pride Month episode of Know Your Enemy, Matt and Sam talk to ...
I am writing you to open a real dialogue. Because I respect you, and also because such a serious dialogue is important, here on the Bloomington campus of Indiana University, in the country, and in the ...