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With Smugglers and Front Companies, China Is Skirting American A.I. Bans
The U.S. is trying to stop China from getting Nvidia microchips to advance its military. The private sector is fighting back.
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Amid Heavy Industry, Canada’s Newest (and Tiniest) National Park
The creation of an urban national park on an unprepossessing parcel of land in the automaking hub of Windsor, Ontario, is also meant to serve as an act of Indigenous reconciliation.
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‘I Just Have Some Questions’: An Interview With Justice Gorsuch
The justice talks about everything from his indictment of the regulatory state to the rights of Native Americans.
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Harris’s Brother-in-Law Tony West, an Uber Executive, is a Key Adviser
Tony West, the top lawyer for Uber, is weighing in on polling and running mates. His presence has made some liberals anxious.
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Takeaways From Our Investigation Into Banned A.I. Chips in China
The Times found an active trade in Nvidia chips in China despite U.S. national security restrictions, as well as unreported incidents of how the technology had been used to further defense research.
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Inside the Obama-Shapiro Relationship
The speaking style of Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, a potential vice presidential pick, can sound suspiciously similar to President Obama’s. But the real connection between the two men is deeper than commonly known.
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Trying to Save a Concrete ‘Monument to Corruption’
An icon of socialist modernist architecture in the capital of the former Soviet republic that is now Moldova has been at the center of a tussle between corrupt developers and preservationists.
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Hamas May Emerge Battered, but Not Beaten, From Israel’s Latest Blows
The assassinations of two Hamas leaders may be a short-term setback, analysts say, not enough to prevent the group from re-emerging intact — and possibly more radicalized.
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Florida Retirees Flaunt Loyalties to Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
In The Villages, Florida’s retirement mecca, pro-Trump residents have been galvanized by a surprising showing of support for Kamala Harris.
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Can Kamala Harris Win Back Arab American Voters?
Vice President Kamala Harris has not strayed from President Biden on Israel policy, but she has taken a stronger tone on the suffering of Palestinians.
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Has the Long Friendship of Bill Gates and Warren Buffett Reached Its Final Act?
Growing tensions between the two billionaires, over issues both substantive and stylistic, have roiled the world of philanthropy.
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War Shatters Dating Scene for Women in Ukraine
While the pursuit of love might seem secondary to dealing with the horrors and privations of the war, many Ukrainians say they need romantic relationships to help them cope.
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Kamala Harris Renews Energy Among Georgia’s South Asian Voters
In Georgia, a critical swing state President Biden won by less than 12,000 votes in 2020, Kamala Harris’ political identity has prompted renewed interest among Asian Americans, the fastest-growing group of eligible voters in the United States.
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Trump Says Georgia’s Governor Is Hampering His Efforts to Win There
At a rally in Atlanta, former President Donald J. Trump said the battleground state’s governor and its top election official wanted him “to lose” and falsely claimed that he’d won the state twice.
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A Doping Scandal
How the Olympic drug testing system is supposed to function — and why it may not be working.
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Harris to Interview V.P. Contenders in Final Test of Chemistry
At least three candidates — Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona, Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota and Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania — are scheduled to meet with Vice President Kamala Harris on Sunday.
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In Kamala Harris’s Blackness, I See My Own
Multiracial people have long been a Rorschach test: We bear the anxiety, rage and confusion that others feel about the amorphous construction we call race.
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Perfumes, Candles, Toothpaste — Vanilla Is in Everything. And It’s Under Threat.
Vanilla substitutes exist, but there is no replacing the symphonic complexities of the real thing.
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A Fight Over a Minnesota Farm, a Mosque and the Meaning of Inclusivity
A proposed “Muslim-friendly” community near Minneapolis was called segregationist. The backlash was called Islamophobic. Who gets to define inclusion?
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Empty Churches Are Being Turned Into Restaurants and Malls
With vaulted ceilings and stained glass windows, the architectural features of churches have become huge draws for business owners.
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