The Spectator is Britain’s oldest and most influential magazine, with incisive political and economic analysis, unrivalled books and arts reviews, and unmissable lifestyle writing, plus the funniest cartoons. It’s more cocktail party than political party, and we’d love it if you joined us.
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CONTRIBUTORS
MAGA’s Oprah
DIARY
Cracks in the ice • Trump’s Greenland strategy could imperil his legacy
NATO’s Suez moment • The US is no longer Europe’s guarantor
SPECTATOR ACADEMY READING LIST • Each issue we ask a different contributor to recommend ten books every American should read to revive their mind and our shared culture. Here are Jacob Heilbrunn’s.
Wrecking ball • Will Trump face a domestic backlash over his Greenland caper?
Oceans apart • The decision to hand over the Chagos Islands has left the British PM isolated
Serious beef • EU farmers’ objections to a South American trade deal
Protection equals sovereignty
Meet the male Kardashians
Scam states • Inside the Cambodian cybercrime compounds run by Chinese gangs
Great Scott • Remembering the creator of Dilbert
The deep-state vampire
Screen test • Unmasking the true TV villains
Sexual healing • I’ve had enough of misogynistic sex-confessionals
There should be no ‘sanctuary’ from ICE
Gold rush • There’s no reason to stop buying precious metals
Rage against the machine • The clamor against X’s lurid deepfakes is still an attack on freedom of speech
War on censors • Congress must shield the US from foreign attacks on the First Amendment
Northern exposure • Data is the reason the Arctic has become a key battleground
Sound and fury • The Venezuela operation signals a shift in sonic warfare
Warning lights • The drive toward electric cars has been a disaster
False advertising • AI marketing is driving me to distraction
Inside story • Nicolas Sarkozy’s prison memoir is a compelling portrait of France itself, writes Ian Maxwell
Terror squad
Drive through history
Allergic to experts
A view set in stone
Potted history • Two major exhibitions by Edmund de Waal show the artist’s extraordinary depth, writes James Cahill
It’s good to walk
To see, or not to see?
Behind the auteur
Managing decline
January
New York life
Best life
Country life
American life
Kitchen karma • The mindfulness behind the cooking of Buddhist nun Jeong Kwan
Pit stop
A slice of nostalgia • Hunting for the Pizza Hut of my youth
Sex sells • Why I can’t resist a red-light district
Long hair
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