The Chronicle

Opinion

The case for patience in an impatient age

We have built a culture that rewards the fast answer. The important questions rarely have one.

Quotation of the Day

“You cannot legislate trust back into a system. You can only earn it, slowly and in public — which is exactly what nobody in this room seems to have the patience for.”

a delegate to the talks, on the agreement that nearly collapsed.

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The city that priced out its own
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The people who keep a city running increasingly cannot afford to live in it. The math is finally catching up.

Letters to the Editor

On the value of patience

“Your columnist is right that we reward speed over judgment. But institutions relearn patience only when their leaders model it — and lately few do.”

Who keeps the city running

“I have driven a bus in this city for nineteen years. We were called essential exactly until the emergency ended, and not a day longer.”

The limits of the machine

“The new tools are genuinely impressive. The judgment they cannot supply is the only part of the job that ever mattered.”

A reader on the talks

“Quiet diplomacy works precisely because it is quiet. We should stop demanding that it perform for the cameras.”

From the Editorial Board

The habits that hold a republic together are quieter than the crises that test them.

Our view on the week: institutions endure not by decree but by the ordinary, unglamorous work of keeping faith with them.

The city that priced out its own
The Economy

The people who keep a city running increasingly cannot afford to live in it. The math is finally catching up.

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