Friday, October 29, 2021

Opinion Today: A Republican leader’s idea for our supply chain crisis

Senator Josh Hawley's proposal for legislation to try to spur the sale of more American goods.
Keith Bradsher/The New York Times
Author Headshot

By Patrick Healy

Deputy Opinion Editor

​For many people in America and across the globe, the supply chain crisis is not a theoretical problem or just a government-procurement headache but an immediate, real-world reality: We try to buy and bring home products whose availability we once took for granted, and come up short.

In Times Opinion, we've explored these challenges with pieces about globalization and government policy and the supply chain crisis and the pandemic. Our columnist Paul Krugman weighed in this month with a piece making a case for measured optimism that disruptions could become rarer as Covid cases fall.

The causes and future of America's supply chain crisis are an important national issue, and a core value of Times Opinion is to present an array of arguments and ideas to help readers think for themselves about critical matters. Recently, Senator Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, reached out to The Times with a guest essay about his views on the supply issue and how both parties set the stage for it, and about a bill he has introduced in the Senate to try to spur the sale of American-made goods.

The supply chain problems highlight ​American dependence on foreign production​, ​and they present a good moment to think about alternative models. Hawley's bill and his broader views on trade ​​offer ​plenty for Times readers to scrutinize and debate, as he raises questions about America's agreements with its trading partners and the country's approach to production, aiming at pressuring companies to sell more American-made goods.

We have a high bar for publishing guest essays from national elected officials, given their political self-interests and access to large audiences, but we commission and consider such pieces when their ideas help us bring readers new or different viewpoints on vital issues.

Senator Hawley's essay proposes an approach to a crisis affecting all of us, regardless of political party, and we hope that Times readers will find it useful as they think about the availability of consumer goods, trade and the wider American economy.

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Ideas

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The Self-Isolation of the American Left

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Our rules and institutions exist for us and our flourishing, not for their own sake.

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Guest Essay

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Many outsiders are weighing in on what should be done about and on behalf of Taiwan. Few, though, are listening to what Taiwan is saying.

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The Surprising History of Roe v. Wade

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Is Our True-Crime Obsession Doing More Harm Than Good?

Stories about real-life murders are everywhere — and some think it's rotting our brains.

By Phoebe Lett

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Guest Essay

Facing Up to the Racist Legacy of America's Immigration Laws

If Americans truly want to live up to the idea that the country is a nation of immigrants, then most barriers to immigration should come down.

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New York Times Opinion curates a wide range of views, inviting rich discussion and debate that helps readers analyze the world. This work is made possible with the support of subscribers. Please consider subscribing to The Times with this special offer.

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Thursday, October 28, 2021

Opinion Today: Farewell, Nick Kristof

After 37 years, a distinguished and imaginative journalist is leaving The Times.
David Smoler
Author Headshot

By Kathleen Kingsbury

Opinion Editor

Few columnists have better embodied the journalist values of The New York Times than Nicholas Kristof, which makes it all the harder to say that he has decided to leave us after a storied 37-year career.

An Opinion columnist since 2001, Nick redefined the role in the best possible way — elevating the journalistic form to a new height of public service with a mix of incisive reporting, profound empathy and a determination to bear witness to those struggling and suffering across the globe.

Today we published a farewell essay by Nick, capturing several highlights of his years at The Times and explaining why he is leaving. "I want to make clear that while I've spent my career on the front lines of human suffering and depravity, covering genocide, war, poverty and injustice," Nick writes, "I've emerged firmly believing that we can make real progress by summoning the political will."

Nick is, at heart, a reporter: As a foreign correspondent, Nick won a Pulitzer in 1990, with his colleague and wife, Sheryl WuDunn, for their work about the pro-democracy movement in China and at Tiananmen Square. As a columnist, Nick continued traveling to country after country to bring the hardest truths and the most inspiring stories to our readers.

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Nick was a finalist for the Pulitzer in commentary in 2004 and 2005 before winning in 2006. The Pulitzer Prize Board that year cited "his graphic, deeply reported columns that, at personal risk, focused attention on genocide in Darfur and that gave voice to the voiceless in other parts of the world."

Nick has been a generous colleague and constant source of wise counsel, journalistic creativity and ambitious standard-setting in his years with us. He is often the first to welcome a newcomer to Times Opinion or congratulate a colleague on a success or good fortune; his generosity really knows no end. But as much as anything, Nick has shown us how to pursue journalism as both a noble and a purposeful mission, to help the less fortunate and force the powerful and privileged not to look away from the pain so common in this world. He did so not in a hectoring or guilt-inducing way, but in the spirit of trying to make a difference.

Nick, you made a difference in countless lives over the years, and certainly in ours. Thank you for your work, for your friendship and leadership, and for the example you set for journalists everywhere.

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As world leaders gather in Glasgow for consequential climate change negotiations, join us at The New York Times Climate Hub to uncover answers to one of the most urgent questions of our time: How do we adapt and thrive on a changing planet? Glasgow, Scotland, Nov. 3–11; in person and online. Get tickets at nytclimatehub.com.

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New York Times Opinion curates a wide range of views, inviting rich discussion and debate that helps readers analyze the world. This work is made possible with the support of subscribers. Please consider subscribing to The Times with this special offer.

Games Here is today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Forward this newsletter to friends to share ideas and perspectives that will help inform their lives. They can sign up here. Do you have feedback? Email us at opiniontoday@nytimes.com.

Contact us If you have questions about your Times account, delivery problems or other issues, visit our Help Page or contact The Times.

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