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Meta’s Move to Limit Fact-Checking Endangers Women—and Democracy
Zuckerberg’s decision is a profound step backward that will amplify the spread of hate and misogyny—and further erode American democracy. -
Improving U.S. Intelligence Sharing With Allies and Partners
If the United States and its allies and partners are to remain secure, intelligence sharing needs an upgrade. -
Foreign Assistance Is Not an Article II Power
Congress, not the president, has the authority to determine U.S. foreign assistance policy. -
Lawfare Daily: The Impoundment Crisis, One Month In
How are courts and Congress handling the impoundment crisis? -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, March 7
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
Does the Response to OPM’s Latest Email Evidence a Turf War?
Agencies push back against Musk’s demand that employees report on their recent activities. -
DeepSeek Points Toward U.S.-China Cooperation, Not a Race
The United States’s rational response to recent Chinese advances in AI is international collaboration, not an AI race. -
Rational Security: The “A Perfect Meeting” Edition
Scott Anderson was joined by Molly Reynolds and Quinta Jurecic to work through the week’s big national security news stories. -
National Security Excerpts From Trump’s Address to Congress
A roundup of foreign policy and national security statements from Trump’s first address to Congress since re-election. -
JAGs Alone Can’t Defend Rule of Law
Institutional impediments prevent military lawyers at tactical units from serving as bulwarks against military misuse. -
Lawfare Daily: The State of the Gaza Ceasefire and Related Issues, with Joel Braunold
Discussing the changing terms of the Gaza ceasefire. -
Trump’s Dismantling of the Government Hurts Due Process
The Trump administration’s firings threaten the procedural due-process rights of individuals who appear before adjudicatory agencies. -
Impunity or Accountability: Which Will Hurt Israel or Fuel Antisemitism?
The only bias that may be rightly ascribed to the ICC is bias against criminal atrocity. -
Your Town Needs AI Experts, Not Just More GPUs
Geographic barriers to AI expertise threaten progress. A national strategy for diffusing AI knowledge may be essential. -
Lawfare Daily: Tim Fist and Arnab Datta on the Race to Build AI Infrastructure in America
Discussing how America's AI infrastructure is being built. -
The Situation: How Does Trump Stack Up Against Neville Chamberlain?
I asked Winston Churchill. -
Challenges in Governing AI Agents
Autonomous systems are being rapidly deployed, but governance efforts are still in their infancy. -
Problems With a Criminal Law Response to Transnational Repression
Addressing transnational repression with criminal law risks harming the communities it seeks to protect and punishing protected speech. -
Israel’s Renewed Judicial Overhaul
With the war in the Middle East receding, the battle over Israel’s legal system has resumed, threatening judicial independence. -
Escalation: No Guarantees
Listen to the second episode of Escalation, a narrative podcast on U.S.-Ukraine relations.
More Articles
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Executive Order Designates Fentanyl as Weapon of Mass Destruction
The White House says fentanyl is “closer to a chemical weapon than a narcotic,” warning about the opioid's possible use in a terror attack. -
The European Union Changes Course on Digital Legislation
The proposed digital omnibus package would make changes to the AI Act and GDPR in addition to other data-related measures. -
The Pentagon’s Operational Technology Problem
The readiness of America’s warfighters depends on the cybersecurity of operational technology that is largely unregulated.
