With Americans turning in over 620,000 pounds of medications in a single day, National Prescription Drug Take Back Day proves the quiet war on opioid misuse is won through community action and systemic reform.
Browsing: Culture & Society
As book bans soar in Florida, Texas, and Tennessee, PEN America warns the normalization of censorship threatens students and democracy itself.
A reader’s disillusionment with a foreign friend’s indifference to U.S. strife reveals a deep need for empathy—one our era’s global politics urgently demands.
Gaza’s starvation deaths, now at 453 and counting, highlight a preventable crisis fueled by blockade and inaction—especially for children.
GWAR’s latest Riot Fest spectacle revives fierce debate over the line between provocative art and the normalization of political violence—especially amid rising tensions and tragic headlines.
DC Comics’ abrupt cancellation of Red Hood after its writer’s inflammatory posts underscores the precarious balance between free expression, industry standards, and the boundaries of civil discourse.
In cities across the country, volunteers honored 9/11 by packing millions of meals for families in need, a testament to unity and civic action in the face of growing hunger.
Aziz Ansari’s ‘Good Fortune’ uses vintage Hollywood style to reveal how America’s wealth divide has only grown more surreal; at TIFF, the film delivers both laughs and a wake-up call.
Hundreds of LGBTQ+ Catholics and families walked through Rome’s Holy Door for the first time in history, marking a bold step toward inclusion—even as questions loom over the Church’s future openness.
The TIFF premiere of ‘Palestine 36’ became a rallying point for art as resistance, bridging the 1936 uprising with the present-day Gaza crisis.