
NYT > Opinion
- How a ‘Wisp of a Girl’ Conquered Pakistan
With half her adult life spent either in exile or in prison, Benazir Bhutto might have lived like a medieval princess, but she died like an ordinary, modern Pakistani. - Forgotten Step Toward Freedom
A significant milestone in American history has gone strangely unnoticed: the 200th anniversary of Jan. 1, 1808, when the importation of slaves into the United States was prohibited. - A Lifesaving Checklist
Washington is blocking research on a promising medical tool. - Humanizing the Revolution
If President Hugo Chávez has dreamed of turning Venezuela into a Cuba with oil, the Venezuelans who oppose him have discovered the perfect antidote: the student movement. - Paris Isn’t Burning
Even the French are obeying a government ban on public smoking. - Immigration and the Candidates
Even by the low standards of presidential campaigns, the issue of immigration has been badly served in the 2008 race. - The Poles Get Cold Feet
Poland’s new government is right to be taking a skeptical second look at the Bush administration’s proposal to station 10 interceptor missiles there as part of a European-based missile-defense system. - Am I a Karma Karma Karma Karma Karma Chameleon?
New Year’s resolutions require too much discipline. An exorcism seems much easier. - Selections From Opinion Online
Readers respond to Jet Lagged, Think Again and Domestic Disturbances blog posts. - The Airport Security Follies
Our approach to airport screening since 9/11 has been wrongheaded. - Red States Looking in the Pink?
Do certain recent trends bode well for the G.O.P. in the next election? - War for the Holidays
As most Americans enjoy the holidays, several nations in Africa are preparing for the onslaught of war. - With Readers Like Y’All…
Dick Cavett sifts through comments from readers. - No Mundane Madness
The madness of the holidays gets trumped by a larger insanity. - Bound for Academic Glory?
A new report on higher education raises questions about how public universities can improve. - Not Your Mom’s Apple Pie Chart
How readers fared solving the "Which Came First?" mystery. - Rescuing Gateway
Though about two million people visit parts of the Gateway National Recreation Area every year, it is in need of help from the local and federal government. - Cash-Strapped Consumers
The ease of borrowing has made it possible for many people to live beyond their means. But the end of easy money is now exposing Americans’ vulnerability. - After Benazir Bhutto
Ms. Bhutto’s death leaves the Bush administration with the principled, if unfamiliar, option of using American resources to fortify Pakistan’s battered democratic institutions. - State Without Pity
Texas’s governor, Legislature, courts and voters should reassess their addiction to executions. - The Work Remaining
A halfway resolution of the United States attorneys scandal is not enough. It needs to be investigated vigorously and completely. - When Christmas Morning Comes
Christmas is imbued with a recognition that the transition from sleep to waking always carries with it the immeasurable gift of a new day. - The Hangover That Lasts
The more we have binged on alcohol — and the younger we have started to binge — the more we experience significant, though often subtle, effects on the brain and cognition. - Clocking the Candidates
The front-running Democrats, thanks mostly to a smaller field, got a lot more time to speak than the front-running Republicans in the televised debates of 2007. - A Colony With a Conscience
This republic owes its enduring strength to a fragile, scorched and little-known document called the Flushing Remonstrance. - You Must Remember This
A look at the important news that most of us have forgotten from 2007. - Mortgage Meltdown
Is there a remedy to the mortgage crisis?