About 40,000 people are under evacuation orders and schools have shut down in Southern California due to a hazardous chemical ...
The fatal shooting at a San Diego mosque this week comes amid a rise of incidents of hate or prejudice against Muslims in the ...
Despite coming from different ends of the political spectrum – and lingering tensions between their countries – Japanese ...
Across the U.S., states are recognizing that home-based food businesses provide vital economic and community services. New ...
The stories in our magazine this week are timely and news relevant. Together, they paint a portrait of global humanity that’s ...
Some congressional Republicans have pushed back at President Trump on a fund to pay people the justice department finds were ...
As the expression of the divine Mind, God, we’re able to hear the guidance we need to find our way safely out of hazardous situations.
I grew up in working-class Jersey City during the 1960s and ’70s. The fathers worked long hours; the mothers maintained the ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Opened April 2026, the Phoenix Library in Gaza City is rebuilding a culture of reading with books salvaged from more than two ...
Israel. But a clear, generational shift is emerging, as younger conservatives have grown skeptical of U.S. aid to Israel and of Jewish political influence in the U.S.
From Voltaire to Joseph Heller, writers have used satire to skewer institutions and individuals. Historian Barbara Tuchman observed that “Satire is a wrapping of exaggeration around a core of reality.