
NYT > Opinion
- The City | Long Island | Westchester: The Governor’s Nose Dive
There is a lot of important business facing Gov. Eliot Spitzer and the New York State Legislature. It is time to put Troopergate among the footnotes in the history books. - Editorial: Slowing the Rise in Health Costs
The good news is that many of the reforms analyzed by the Commonwealth Fund might improve the quality of health care delivered to Americans. - Editorial: A Pause From Death
The U.N. General Assembly’s vote for a global moratorium on the death penalty was a milestone, yet its symbolic weight made barely a ripple in the U.S. - Editorial: Qaddafi Plays Paris and Madrid
Libya’s leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, has been trying to rehabilitate his international image. Despite his efforts, he still has a long way to go. - Editorial: An Idea Whose Time Should Be Past
Nowhere is repeal of mandatory-sentencing policies more urgently needed than in New York, which passed its draconian drug laws in the 1970s. - Op-Ed Columnist: A Holiday Political Quiz
Five days to Christmas and two weeks to Iowa, how well do you know the candidates for the 2008 presidential election? - Op-Ed Columnist: Brown’s British Blues
Gordon Brown’s lack of glitz and sparkle has come to seem what it is in the modern political age: a drawback. - Op-Ed Contributor: Hell on Wheels
Unless you are a deep-sea diver or, maybe, an iron-ore salesman, your luggage really shouldn’t necessitate load-bearing wheels. - Zoom: Not Your Mom’s Apple Pie Chart
How readers fared solving the "Which Came First?" mystery. - Think Again: Two Aesthetics
Reactions to a new film, the New Museum . . . and an old television show. - Domestic Disturbances: Holier Than They
For all the presidential candidates’ talk about religion, few are asking what it means to be truly Christian in spirit. - Talk Show: When They Told Me Norman Wrote a Book…
The author unearths a little-known book by Norman Mailer and finds himself in it. - Zoom: Not Your Mom’s Apple Pie Chart
How readers fared solving the "Which Came First?" mystery. - Think Again: Two Aesthetics
Reactions to a new film, the New Museum . . . and an old television show. - Domestic Disturbances: Holier Than They
For all the presidential candidates’ talk about religion, few are asking what it means to be truly Christian in spirit. - Talk Show: When They Told Me Norman Wrote a Book…
The author unearths a little-known book by Norman Mailer and finds himself in it. - Editorial: A Crisis Long Foretold
When all the truth is out about the twin crises of the subprime lending mess, the Federal Reserve will have company in the hall of shame. - Editorial: Blazing Arizona
On Jan. 1, Arizona intends to become the first state to try to muscle its way out of its immigration problems on its own. - Editorial: Disappointments on Climate
A week that could have brought important progress on climate change ended in disappointment. - Editorial: Plenty of Blame for Afghanistan
Unless the United States and Europe come up with a better strategy — and invest more money and troops — the “good war” in Afghanistan will go irretrievably bad. - Editorial: A Long Time Coming
New Jersey’s renunciation of the death penalty could inspire officials in other states to muster the courage to revisit their own laws on capital punishment. - Op-Ed Contributor: The Vatican’s Relative Truth
In Pope Benedict XVI’s trip to the U.N. next April, will he be able to find a language to ensure that what he pitches is also what people catch? - Op-Ed Contributor: The Mourning After
Widows and their children in many societies are shunned, abused and exploited. - Op-Ed Contributor: The Office I Left Giuliani
Rudolph W. Giuliani’s claim to have turned around the Manhattan United States attorney’s office is an insult to the outstanding men and women who have served in that office over the last 50 years. - Op-Ed Contributor: Clause and Effect
The best way to make sense of the Second Amendment is to take away all the commas. - Op-Ed Contributor: Static on the Dream Phone
The race is on for competitive advantage in the truly open cellular phone network of the future.