(Jon Gerberg/The Post)
American IconDeadly weapon, divided nation
The Washington Post and Ipsos asked nearly 400 AR-15 owners why they own the rifle, what they use it for and how often they fire it. Here’s what the poll found.
MORE FROM THIS SERIES
More than 5,000 pages from a Moscow-based contractor offer a glimpse into planning and training that would allow Russia’s intelligence agencies and hacking groups to find vulnerabilities, coordinate attacks and control online activity.
By Craig Timberg, Ellen Nakashima, Hannes Munzinger and Hakan Tanriverdi
MORE COVERAGE
With his instrument of choice, he called himself a “political cartoonist for the blind.”
By Bart Barnes24 minutes ago
Advertisement
Advertisement
Transgender people are rarely the perpetrators of mass shootings, which are overwhelmingly carried out by cisgender men, say criminal justice experts.
MORE COVERAGE
By The WayAdvice
Cruises and car rentals are among the best bargains.
Organizational experts and real roomies share strategies for dealing with leftovers, fridge cleanouts and who ate what.
By Maxwell Rabb
Happening Now
Upcoming live Events
Friday, March 31, at 12:00 p.m. EDT
Friday, March 31, at 12:00 p.m. EDT
Monday, April 3, at 3:00 p.m. EDT
Most Read
1
The panel installed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the Reedy Creek Improvement District transferred much of its power to Disney in an 11th-hour agreement.
Don’t Miss
AMERICAN ICONDeadly weapon, divided nation
Advertisement
Advertisement
For YouRecommended stories
Well+BeingNews and advice to live well every day
The group of drugs was initially developed for Type 2 diabetes. (The Post)
By Luis Velarde and Brian Monroe
ClimateExpanded coverage of a changing planet
Climate LabAnalysis
By Cathy Free
By Amy Joyce, Caitlin Gibson and Elizabeth Chang
Advertisement
By Erin Cox1 hour ago
Advertisement