Grim 18th-century-style oil painting of Trump as a crowned king on a throne, overseeing a joyless military parade of tanks and unhappy American soldiers.

The Last Constitutional Moment: America Chooses Between Kings and Democracy

On June 14, 2025, more than 2,000 protests are taking place across all 50 U.S. states in a nationwide event called “No Kings Day”. The demonstrations, organized by a coalition of over 150 groups including Indivisible and the ACLU, directly counter President Trump’s $45 million military parade and protest the policies of his second term. Organizers describe the mobilization as “the largest single-day, peaceful protest in recent American history”. The central message, captured on signs reading “He was elected president NOT KING,” is a direct response to President Trump’s recent embrace of monarchical rhetoric. In Philadelphia, one of the major demonstration sites, Pennsylvania criminal lawyer Holly Feeney stated her reason for marching: “I am just appalled at the lawlessness of this administration. Disappearing people is what authoritarian governments do, not democratic republics”. ...

A watercolor painting in landscape format shows an elderly man in profile looking thoughtfully at a small white device on the wall, bathed in warm afternoon light from a nearby window.

The Quiet Revolution: How AI Is Reshaping the Most Human Moments of Aging

Foster Vance sits in his apartment at Fellowship Square Mesa, dealing with a loss that has shaken more than his emotional equilibrium. Since his wife died in February, the 82-year-old resident has struggled with something he never anticipated: his physical balance. “I recently lost my wife in February, so my balance of having somebody in the apartment disappeared,” Vance explains. “I haven’t fallen in a year and a half, and I do not want to fall.” ...

Developer with hands hovering uncertainly above keyboard, looking up with wonder and uncertainty as code writes itself on screen, surrounded by fading programming books and floating AI interface elements

The Vibe Coding Paradox: When Understanding Became Optional

The crisis of understanding arrived without fanfare, but its confession was public. On February 6, 2025, Jean Hsu sat down to build a “Trader Joe’s Snack Box Builder” and made a startling admission: “I didn’t even read the code that was generated.” Within two hours, she had deployed a functional application. “I didn’t edit a single line of code by hand, unless you count my OpenAI API key I copy/pasted.” That same day, Andrej Karpathy—co-founder of OpenAI, former AI director at Tesla, a programmer whose expertise was beyond question—made his own confession that would redefine what it means to create software. His tweet about “vibe coding” described something unprecedented in the history of human craft: the ability to build functional, complex systems without comprehending how they work. ...