
Breaking the Constitution Won’t Fix the Bureaucracy
A government efficiency panel threatens U.S. government competence and constitutional underpinnings, warn two administrative science experts

Breaking the Constitution Won’t Fix the Bureaucracy
A government efficiency panel threatens U.S. government competence and constitutional underpinnings, warn two administrative science experts

The Real Reason People Don’t Trust in Science Has Nothing to Do with Scientists
“Propaganda works” is the real upshot of a survey showing lingering postpandemic distrust of science


How the Duck Stamp Became One of the Most Successful Conservation Tools in U.S. History
Inside the fiercely competitive Federal Duck Stamp Contest, part of the wildly successful conservation program that has preserved millions of acres of waterfowl habitat

The UnitedHealthcare Tragedy Is Why Insurance Needs to Change Now
I am a trauma surgeon and gunshot survivor who has experienced byzantine health insurance coverage firsthand. I understand why people are furious

The Public Distrusts Scientists’ Morals, Not Their Science
Reaction to a recent Pew survey on the public’s trust in science shows that the scientific community is not ready to address the real problem

Addiction Telemedicine Has Saved Lives. Let’s Keep It Going
Pandemic relaxation of buprenorphine-prescribing restrictions must continue to keep saving lives amid a U.S. overdose epidemic

AI Will Turn Our Lives into The Truman Show
Large language models can create muddled, misinformed multiverses

How the Return of Salmon to the Klamath River Shows Us What’s Possible in Wildlife Conservation
The Klamath River was a tragic example of degraded wildlife habitat. The removal of its dam demonstrates how people can halt the decline of, and even restore, wildlife

Here’s Why Abortion Largely Won on Election Day—But Not on the Top of the Ticket
Voters supported abortion rights measures while electing antiabortion candidates in the 2024 election. The split reflects a complicated abortion landscape post-Dobbs

Grumpy Voters Want Better Stories—Not Statistics
A social scientist looks at the portrait of U.S. voters, and voting, in the aftermath of the 2024 presidential election that put Trump into the White House

RFK, Jr., Is a Bad Prescription for U.S. Public Health
Prominent vaccine skeptic RFK, Jr., is a proven menace to public health. But with a bird flu outbreak looming, he is poised to take a perch atop the federal public health enterprise

Bury Me on the Moon—Preferably on the Far Side
The far side of the moon offers grounds for compromise between advocates and opponents of lunar development