John Deasy

The Education-Industrial Complex

During the Vietnam War, a famous protest bumper sticker read: It will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need and the Air Force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber. But these days, spending on quick fixes for education is approaching levels similar to the ...

Axe Cop

Corruption of Blood

One of the more striking evolutions of recent decades has been the stealth revival of the ancient concept of hereditary guilt. It’s seldom called that"€”terms such as “white privilege” and “structural racism” are more popular"€”but if you’ve been paying ...

Helsinki Cathedral and monument to Alexander II, Finland

PISA, Piece by Piece

With the release of new PISA test scores for 65 countries’ 15-year-olds this week, it’s worth taking a look at TIME reporter Amanda Ripley’s latest book The Smartest Kids in the World: And How They Got that Way. Ripley came up with the clever idea of following three American ...

The New Hunger Games: Empty Calories

When a movie enjoys a $153-million opening weekend, you might think the writer-director would be the toast of the town. Yet even while Gary Ross’s 2012 hit The Hunger Games, a dystopian tale of provincial revolt against the corrupt Capitol, was still doing boffo box office, Lionsgate replaced ...

Bruce Dern

77 Years a Dern

Will Nebraska, Alexander Payne’s modest masterpiece starring 77-year-old Bruce Dern as a taciturn ex-mechanic who stares like a senile prairie dog, somehow edge out frontrunner 12 Years a Slave for the Best Picture Oscar? If it does, we’ll never hear the end of it. How often since ...

Chiwetel Ejiofor

New Movie, Same Old Skin Game

12 Years a Slave"€”a biopic about Solomon Northup, a black fiddler in New York who somehow wound up a slave in Louisiana from 1841 until the law rescued him in 1853"€”is the nearly universally acclaimed frontrunner for the Best Picture Oscar. Yet it’s built upon a fourth-rate screenplay ...

Peyton Manning

Killing Chip to Save Tyrone

If a runaway trolley were about to smash into a bus containing 100 trapped members of the Harlem Jazz Orchestra, would you push a wholly innocent man named Chip Ellsworth III onto the tracks to stop the accident? What if the bus held 100 members of the New York Philharmonic and the guilt-free ...

Darrell Wallace, Jr.

Nature, Nurture, and NASCAR

There was a fair amount of national media excitement this weekend over the news that Darrell Wallace, Jr. had won a NASCAR race. As a Southern Californian, my attention span for auto racing has shrunk to the four seconds it takes a top fuel dragster at the Pomona Winternationals to roar 1,000 ...

The Trouble With Texas

Is Texas about the best fate that a heavily Hispanicized America can hope for? In a future United States that won’t be able to generate all that much per-capita wealth, is Texas‘s system of cheap labor, cheap land, cheap taxes, and cheap government the only plausible future for the ...

In Search of Sexier Scientists

Continuing its blanket coverage of the problems of people who don’t really have problems, The New York Times turns from the plight of female Harvard Business School students to the tribulation of female Yale physics majors. In “Why Are There Still So Few Women in Science?,” ...