World News Insights: Opinion Articles

Going back to 1975, our minds would spew out pages of history that the well-intended among us thought had been turned. Maarouf Saad’s assassination, the Ain al-Rummaneh bus…all were recalled to this present day. The past does not pass in Lebanon. What leaves the past in the present, or perhaps…

Hazem Saghieh

I have a T-shirt that I have never put on because I don’t deserve to wear it. It says “Master of ’Metrics” on the back. I got it in 2015 as a promotional tie-in with a review copy of a book on econometrics called “Mastering ’Metrics: The Path From Cause to Effect,” co-written by Joshua Angrist,…

Peter Coy

There’s a pattern to medical reversals that can help explain this week’s seeming U-turn on that age-old advice to take an aspirin a day to prevent heart attacks and strokes. Evidence had actually been building for some time that this might do a lot of people more harm than good. This latest news…

Faye Flam

In testimony before a Senate subcommittee last week, Frances Haugen, a former Facebook employee turned whistle-blower, raised a number of important and complex policy questions about how society might better regulate the wayward social-media giant. But she also raised a very basic question, one…

Farhad Manjoo

In an age of masking, compulsive hand sanitizing and plexiglass dividers, it seems inconceivable that for more than 40 years people enthusiastically signed up — and were often put on a waiting list — to have respiratory viruses, including coronaviruses, dripped into their noses. They were…

Kate Murphy

Is Assad on his way to become a respectable member of the international community? Assad has gained some ground in terms of coming back into the international community. There are many who envisage that Syria could retain its seat in the Arab League by the end of the year. UAE and Jordan have…

Omer Onhon

Heads are rolling at Turkey’s central bank, this time for not lowering interest rates aggressively enough. Deeper cuts will likely come, perhaps as soon as next week. This is a dangerous game when most of the world is moving in the opposite direction. An already battered currency is unlikely to…

Daniel Moss

Green finance, green banking, green investing — in a time of climate change, the capital markets obviously want to assist in the necessary transformation of our economies. Unfortunately, the state is increasingly interfering in these markets in a way that will prove counterproductive because it…

Andreas Kluth

The demise of LinkedIn’s operations in China wasn’t inevitable. Having watched names like Google, Facebook and Twitter retreat from the country, the US social-media provider found a way in 2014 to survive by moderating content in such a way that its presence was palatable to Beijing while still…

Tim Culpan

With Chinese high-yield issues experiencing their worst selloff in a decade, murmurs are growing that China is poised to blink and relent on its property tightening measures. That hope was shattered on Friday. At a news briefing, the People’s Bank of China broke its silence on China Evergrande…

Shuli Ren

The last few days, the Middle East witnessed two visits by two senior Iranian and American officials, as well as Iraq’s general elections. But if the nature of the visit of Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian was clear and widely mentioned in the media, I can claim no knowledge of the…

Eyad Abu Shakra

As soon as United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen announced that the sixth round of Constitutional Committee meetings would begin in Geneva on Oct.18, questions emerged about the viability of this committee and the need for prominent Syrian opposition and civil society figures…

Akram Bunni