Opinions P.M.: Being a journalist in the U.S. is becoming more dangerous
| Plus: All the news I intend to quit |
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| | | | | | | Your afternoon dose of Post commentary and guest opinions. | | | | | | | Happy New Year! If you haven't made your resolutions for 2022, why not resolve to pop your filter bubble by reading Washington Post opinions from across the political spectrum every day? If you don't have a Washington Post subscription yet, you're in luck: Our best sale of the year is still on. If you subscribe today, you'll get a full year's subscription for just $0.99 every four weeks. That includes all of the opinions we share here every day, plus everything our newsroom has to offer: investigations, recipes, book reviews and more. This great deal has been extended, but it won't last forever. — Beatrix Lockwood, operations editor (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post) Discrediting the press isn't new, but this country is entering a new and darker chapter. By Jason Rezaian ● Read more » | | | | Why less news is more: I don't need to know absolutely everything that is going on. By John Huey ● Read more » | | | | Hackers tried to take over a water system in Florida in February, but an alert employee stopped them. By Mark Montgomery and Samantha F. Ravich ● Read more » | | | The women who were victimized by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell deserve answers. By the Editorial Board ● Read more » | | | | It's hard to be too optimistic at the dawn of a new year. By Paul Waldman ● Read more » | | | | Why Democrats must win back ground in the states — for the sake of democracy itself. By Greg Sargent ● Read more » | | | It's the Jan. 6 committee's duty to make a referral to the Justice Department if it finds evidence of criminal wrongdoing. By Jennifer Rubin ● Read more » | | | | Biden is a prisoner of circumstances on inflation and covid. But there's plenty he can control. By Jennifer Rubin ● Read more » | | | | Let's be clear in 2022: Most Republicans are anti-truth, some are anti-democracy. By Jennifer Rubin ● Read more » | | | | | | Opinions you may have missed (Jane Rosenberg/Reuters) Elizabeth Holmes and Ghislaine Maxwell make themselves the victims. By Molly Roberts ● Read more » | | | | It is a Dionysian feast of vanity, a day when people drop the masks and admit that no one asked and no one cares. By John Paul Brammer ● Read more » | | | | Too often, families facing challenges are forced to navigate a confusing network of service providers to access resources. By Kim R. Ford ● Read more » | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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