Freddie deBoer and Alexis Madrigal analyze Google’s data-based approach to driverless cars. Plus: What online education can’t do.
Glenn Loury and Ann Althouse discuss the different pressures facing black and female professionals. Plus: The New York Times vs. Jill Abramson.
Michael Brendan Dougherty and the Rev. James Martin discuss Christian faith and discrepancies in the Bible. Plus: A pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Greg Marx talks to Talia Stroud of the Engaging News Project about encouraging civil disagreement on social media. Plus: Can the comments section be saved?
Do liberal college students not care about diversity of opinion? Bill Scher and Matt Lewis discuss. Plus: How Clinton can prove Rove wrong.
Alexis Okeowo reports from Lagos, Nigeria, on the government’s potential response to a video of the kidnapped schoolgirls. Plus: How #BringBackOurGirls caught on.
Why did feminist scholar bell hooks call the pop star a “terrorist”? Michael Brooks and Samhita Mukhopadhyay consider. Plus: Monica Lewinsky and 2016.
Sarah Posner talks to Kathryn Joyce about how evangelical churches respond to sexual assault. Plus: How evangelical schools handle sexual assault.
Shadi Hamid, author of Temptations of Power: Islamists and Illiberal Democracy in a New Middle East, explains. Plus: Why Egyptian “liberals” support a brutal regime.
Kevin Glass and Timothy Lee consider whether the deal between Comcast and Netflix threatens the future of open networks. Plus: The coming cable behemoth.