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The Coronavirus Crisis

Coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak, from the science of testing and treatment to the fight for herd immunity.

Photo Booth

A Private Garden as an Antidote to Isolation

The photographer Siân Davey said, of her family’s plot in the South of England, “It felt like the potential for the whole world was held in that garden.”
Daily Comment

Lab Leaks and COVID-19 Politics

The latest report on the origin of the virus behind the pandemic is still inconclusive, but there are lessons to be learned from it.
The Political Scene Podcast

COVID-19 at Three: Who Got the Pandemic Right?

Dhruv Khullar examines what strategies worked to control the virus, and talks to the C.D.C.’s director, Rochelle Walensky, about the issue of misinformation.
The New Yorker Radio Hour

The Pandemic at Three: Who Got It Right?

Can we fix the response to COVID-19 in a country that seems broken? Plus, Stephanie Hsu talks with Jia Tolentino about “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
Our Columnists

Two Key Things to Know About This Confusing Economy

Output and employment have rebounded impressively from the pandemic, but the Fed needs to heed some warning signs.
Comment

The Dire Aftermath of China’s Untenable “Zero COVID” Policy

Why did the nation, which suppressed the virus for years, fail to prepare for the inevitable?
Annals of Activism

The Case for Wearing Masks Forever

A ragtag coalition of public-health activists believe that America’s pandemic restrictions are too lax—and they say they have the science to prove it.
Annals of Medicine

The Post-COVID “Immunity Gap” Continues to Pummel Pediatric Wards

While hospitals struggle to find room for young patients, parents have few options for O.T.C. medicines to soothe their sick children.
The Front Row

A Dangerous Moment in the Hollywood Economy

The season’s Oscar bait has fared poorly at the box office. That doesn’t bode well for daring low-budget filmmaking.
Q. & A.

Why Xi Jinping Changed His Mind on “Zero COVID”

After weeks of protests, China will ease its stringent pandemic restrictions. The reversal could be a boon for the economy—and lead to a wave of deaths.
Cultural Comment

The Delight of Edward Hopper’s Solitude

A new show at the Whitney reveals what we’ve been missing during the pandemic.
Daily Comment

How Dissent Grows in China

The protests of recent weeks carry an echo, and a warning, from the Maoist era.
News Desk

What Chinese People Think of Their Government’s “Zero COVID” Policy

Many citizens don’t know anyone who’s had the disease, yet their faith in the country’s restrictive rules is waning.
Q. & A.

How COVID Policies and Party Politics Set the Stage for the Protests in China

Frustrations with Xi Jinping’s harsh approach to the virus have led to the most widespread public demonstrations in decades.
Daily Comment

Chinese Protesters Warily Tell Xi Jinping, “Don’t Push Me”

The nation’s most defiant public demonstrations in years oppose “zero COVID” policies, but their roots run deeper. 
Daily Shouts

A Few Math Problems for Mothers with COVID

Throughout how many Zoom meetings does Elizabeth blow her nose because she used up her sick days on maternity leave?
The Political Scene

How Republicans Claimed COVID as a Winning Campaign Issue

The backlash against pandemic restrictions has become a more potent talking point than the public-health crisis itself.
Our Columnists

America’s Falling Test Scores and the Power of Parental Anxiety

The “Nation’s Report Card” showed a historic drop in test scores. This matters more—and less—than many parents seem to think.
Daily Cartoon

Daily Cartoon: Thursday, October 20th

What did autumn yard work even entail in the Before Times?
Essay

Who’s Left Out of the Learning-Loss Debate

Critics of school closures undermine the two groups who could do the most to help students recover—parents and teachers.