Democracy Dies in Darkness
Ad
With children returning to classrooms and as the delta variant and spotty vaccination uptake send case numbers shooting upward, many Americans wonder what has to happen before life can return to something that feels like 2019.
Currently, without approval from the Pentagon, the D.C. government can’t deploy its own National Guard for any task, as a state can. When a group of Trump supporters mobbed the U.S. Capitol, it took the Pentagon more than three hours to send the D.C. National Guard as backup.
Image
Julius Jones’ sister Antoinette Jones, left, and mother Madeline Jones pose outside their home in Oklahoma City. (Joshua Lott/The Post)
The 41-year-old has been on death row for murder in a 1999 carjacking gone bad. But some have doubts about his guilt, including the woman whose loved one was killed.
Hundreds of millions of dollars now are flowing to an industry long viewed as too risky for serious investment.
Ad
Ad
More Top Stories
The economy is undergoing massive changes. There’s a big mismatch at the moment between the jobs available and what workers want.
Image
Several years ago, a mysterious coral disease began decimating the Florida Reef. The only way to save the animals from extinction? An unprecedented mission to relocate them to facilities across the country.
Stanley A. McChrystal exemplifies how ex-generals sell their battlefield experience in other arenas, from corporations to covid-19 response.
Labor DAY WEEKEND
(Scott Suchman for The Washington Post/food styling by Lisa Cherkasky)
Whether you want a long or short marinating time, these recipes are packed with flavor from herbs, spices and more enhanced by the kiss of the grill.
A staple of the entertainment business is in trouble because of the new covid strain, among other factors.
Morning MixChevronRightStories from all over
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
In Louisiana, only Hurricane Ida has matched the 1856 tropical cyclone’s wind speed, which some meteorologists believe reached up to 150 miles per hour. (USCG Heartland via Storyful)
RetropolisThe Past, Rediscovered
In 1856, a storm that may have been more powerful than Hurricane Ida killed at least 200 wealthy vacationers and the people they enslaved on the resort called Last Island.
Ad
Doug Wilson greets members of the Mutual UFO Network. (David Williams for The Post)
Doug Wilson knew what it was like to be caught between faith and evidence, how one person could glimpse someone’s conviction and see only a conspiracy theory. But after decades living on the outer margins of acceptable belief, he discovered that the community he found among fellow believers in extraterrestrials brought him a sense of meaning, a sense of purpose.
Wife is helping him through serious illness, so he feels guilty about leaving her for woman he met online.
Reader isn’t sure accepting is polite, if there’s no intention to return the favor.
The Kennedy Center’s location was criticized even before it was built. (Bill O’Leary/The Post)
The arts palace continues to be challenged by architecture, isolation and shifts in taste.
In SightPerspective
Robert Capa, born Andre Friedmann in 1913, made his name covering conflict — from the Spanish Civil War to the First Indochina War, where he died after stepping on a land mine in 1954.
;