MoreRSS

site iconVoxModify

Help everyone understand our complicated world, so that we can all help shape it.
RSS(英译中): https://t.morerss.com/rss/Vox
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of Vox

皮特·赫格塞斯的精神领袖解释他的激进信仰

2026-04-20 19:15:00

美国福音派牧师道格·威尔逊(Pastor Doug Wilson)在播客《Today, Explained》中表示,国防部长彼得·赫格赛特(Pete Hegseth)的言论并未与他们所教导的基督教教义相矛盾,他认为赫格赛特是一位言行一致的基督徒绅士。赫格赛特常将美国在伊朗的行动描述为上帝的祝福,并在最近的记者会上引用圣经经文称战争受到上帝的祝福。他身上有“Deus vult”(拉丁语意为“上帝意旨”)的纹身,这一口号曾是中世纪十字军的战斗口号。威尔逊所在的教会——位于爱达荷州莫斯科的基督教会(Christ Church)——近年来在美国各地扩展,最近在华盛顿特区开设了分支机构,旨在吸引日益认同基督教民族主义和基督教神权理念的保守派信徒。威尔逊认为,美国应由基督徒按照基督教原则治理,而特朗普的政策在某些方面更接近圣经中的基督教立场,尽管其行为也存在争议。

威尔逊称,特朗普的领导风格如同“化疗”,虽然具有毒性,但能有效治疗美国的“疾病”(即社会问题)。他承认特朗普的一些行为令人不满,但认为其正面影响远大于负面影响。对于教皇利奥(Pope Leo)批评特朗普发动战争的说法,威尔逊认为教皇的立场带有政治偏见,未能公正看待伊朗政权对平民的大规模屠杀。他指出,特朗普将自己比作耶稣的图片虽被视作亵渎,但特朗普随后删除该图片并解释称自己误将特朗普当作医生,因此他选择相信这一说法。此外,威尔逊回应了作家蒂姆·阿尔伯塔(Tim Alberta)的批评,认为特朗普是对美国教会的考验,而非失败的象征。他强调,许多基督徒正在利用当前的混乱局势积极行动,而非盲目追随特朗普。


---------------
Pete Hegseth, wearing a patterned blue suit with a striped blue tie, stands in front of an American flag.
“I don’t hear anything from him that contradicts what we teach, and I believe that he’s a consistent Christian gentleman,” Pastor Doug Wilson said about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on the Today, Explained podcast. | Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images

War is nothing new for America — but the way Pete Hegseth talks about it is. President Donald Trump’s secretary of defense often styles the US’s actions in Iran as being blessed by God. As being holy.

He likened the recovery of a downed Air Force member in Iran on Easter Sunday to the resurrection of Christ. He quoted a Bible verse about God blessing war at a recent press conference on Iran. Famously, he has a tattoo that says “Deus vult,” which is Latin for “God wills it,” and it was a rallying cry for Christian armies during the Crusades. 

The head of Hegseth’s church, Pastor Doug Wilson, told Today, Explained co-host Noel King that “I like the job he’s doing, and I like how he speaks.” Wilson said that he can hear his teachings coming through when Hegseth talks about the war. 

It’s been a long road for Wilson to achieve this level of influence. The evangelical pastor founded Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho, in the late 1970s. The church has since spread across the country under the umbrella of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches. 

Recently, it opened a branch in Washington, DC: An ideal spot to serve a conservative faithful increasingly warming to Wilson’s ideas around Christian nationalism and Christian theocracy, which hold that the US should be governed by Christians according to Christian principles.

Wilson told Vox that he’s been on the fringes for decades. Now, he’s being invited into the halls of power. He recently led a prayer service at the Pentagon, he’s been on Tucker Carlson and Ross Douthat’s podcasts, he’s spoken at Turning Point USA events and at the National Conservatism Conference. Not so fringe anymore.

In a wide-ranging conversion, Wilson and Noel discussed what his ideal Christian theocracy would look like; his desire to ban abortion, same-sex marriage, repeal the 19th Amendment; and why he thinks Trump is laying the groundwork for his Christian nation.

Below is an excerpt of their conversation, edited for length and clarity. There’s much more in the full podcast, so listen to Today, Explained wherever you get podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Pandora, and Spotify.

Right now the seat of power in America is President Donald Trump. Do you like President Trump’s leadership? 

Two thirds of the time, I like it a lot. A third of the time, I think: What is he doing? 

A good thing to compare Trump to is: America’s got cancer and Trump is chemo. Trump is a radical chemo treatment and chemo is toxic. Chemo is a system where it kills the cancer before it kills the patient. 

I like the progress that Trump has made on the cancer. And I’m aware of some of the damage that’s done to the healthy tissues by his management style, his leadership style. But politics is the art of the possible.

I hear you saying: President Trump is getting us closer to the Christian nation that I want. He also acts in ways that contradict what Christ preaches in the Bible. And he is often a bad role model, right? Do you have any reservations, being a pastor, about letting Trump off the hook? 

If I did let him off the hook, then I would have reservations about that. But I really haven’t. The president needs Christ. But we live in a topsy-turvy world, because there are some of his policies that are far closer to the biblical Christian position than some sanctimonious Christians who disapprove of his mean tweets and his behavior. 

In the congregation I pastor, we don’t have any Trumpkin, wild-eyed supporters where no matter what Trump does, it’s always good. When Trump misbehaves, everybody laughs. We budgeted for that. That’s bad. And we know it’s bad and we say it’s bad. But we don’t have Trump derangement syndrome. 

When he does good things that thrill us, we’re thrilled. I don’t mind saying that there are a whole range of issues where Trump’s behavior has thrilled me, and others that I just heartily disapprove of. And I don’t think I’m setting a poor example for our people. When I say what I think for, of, about both of those categories.

Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, attends a Communion of Reformed Evangelical Church. And that’s why I think people mention you in the same breath. 

“In the world I live in, conservative, evangelical leaders are willing to oppose Trump where they think he’s wrong and they’re willing to support him where they think he’s right.”

Correct.

The secretary of defense has had opportunities — ample opportunities of late — to speak publicly in front of the American people. Do you hear your church’s teachings when he speaks? 

Yes. 

How so? 

Let me flip it around. I don’t hear anything from him that contradicts what we teach, and I believe that he’s a consistent Christian gentleman. I like what he’s doing. I like the job he’s doing, and I like how he speaks. I’ve not heard anything that contradicts what we would teach from the pulpit. 

He has spoken of the war in Iran in religious terms. He also suggests that God is on America’s side. God is rooting for America in this war. I think the thing that people struggle with is the idea that God would be on board when you see civilian casualties like this school in Iran with the children — [more than] 150 people killed. 

That happens, and then the secretary of defense says: God’s on our side. Can you help us understand why that feels right to you? 

The first thing I would say is that no answer should try to pretend that war isn’t horrible, okay? In any war, horrible things will happen.

But when you look at a regime that killed, what, 35 to 40,000 of their own people in the last month or so, if you’re looking at a regime where a woman can be executed for having been raped? We have a lot of problems, a lot of moral problems. We are not a moral paragon. But if you put this, the Western civilization that we have and the Islamic Sharia state that they have in Iran, I believe that it’s not a morally ambiguous situation at all. 

The war has certainly divided Christians. Pope Leo wrote, “God does not bless any conflict. Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.” What do you make of his statements? 

I’d say he needs to read his Old Testament more. Psalm 144:1, “Blessed be the Lord, my rock, who trains my fingers for battle.” Pope Leo, before he was the pope, was just sort of an ordinary Democratic leftist critic of Trump. 

Hmm.

And in the recent spat that Trump and the pope had, it was just Trump dealing with a political opponent, which is what the pope was being. I don’t think the pope was acting in the role of a religious leader executing the scripture there. I think he was just stating his political convictions. 

“God does not bless any conflict. Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.” 

That strikes you as just a political opinion, just a criticism of President Trump?

Yeah, absolutely. Because when you have people who are very selective in their indignation…when you look at the kind of violence that the Iranian regime perpetrates against their own people — like 40,000 people dead — and they did it on purpose as opposed to blowing up a school by accident, and the pope is silent on that kind of thing, and then he turns to go after Trump for conducting this war. I don’t see equal weights and measures there. I don’t think Pope Leo is being honest. 

President Trump posted a meme depicting himself as Jesus Christ. He deleted it, but it struck many Christians, including many conservative Christians, as really appalling. What was your gut reaction to that? And then when you had time to think it through, where did you land on that? 

My first reaction [was] — I tweeted about it, I said: Somebody needs to figure out how to put this picture onto black velvet so that it can be blasphemous and tacky. The picture was blasphemous. The president’s explanation afterward was that he thought it was a doctor figure, not Jesus. 

Do you believe him? 

I find that’s a stretch, but I’m willing to accept it. If he took the picture down and said that portraying himself as Jesus is not what he intended, at least we got that. That was a very good thing. But I think they’ve gotta do better when it comes to social media management. That was a blasphemous image. And blasphemy is no good, no matter who does it. 

What is the penalty for blasphemy? 

It would depend. It’s like first-degree murder down to manslaughter. So there are varying degrees. The worst penalty in the Old Testament for blasphemy was capital punishment. 

Let me ask you one last question. There’s a writer, Tim Alberta. He comes from an evangelical background. He tweeted this the other day in response to President Trump and the image: “My conviction remains: God did not ordain Donald Trump to rescue the American church, or revive the American church, or redeem the American church. God ordained Donald Trump to test the American church. And the American church has failed.” What do you think God is trying to do with President Trump? 

I agree with everything in that tweet right up to the last line. I disagree with the last line. I think that Trump is a test. This goes back to what I said earlier about chemo. I think that the tumultuous times that we’re living in really are a test. But in many ways, I’ve been greatly heartened at how many Christians have gotten to work taking advantage of the opportunity afforded by the chaos of our times. 

I think Tim Alberta’s tweet seemed to indicate that we failed because all the Christians fell in lockstep behind Donald Trump and, and didn’t stand up and challenge him. But in the world I live in, conservative, evangelical leaders are willing to oppose Trump where they think he’s wrong and they’re willing to support him where they think he’s right. And I wouldn’t call that failure.

最高法院将决定警方何时有权使用你的手机来追踪你。

2026-04-20 18:30:00

副总统JD·万斯手持一个高度先进的追踪设备,该设备可被政府用来监控他的所有行动。你可能也在口袋里携带了类似的追踪设备,警方甚至特朗普政府都可以借此追踪你的行踪。如果你使用手机,你的位置信息会持续被暴露。手机通常通过连接附近的通信塔或“基站”来接收信号,因此你的手机运营商(以及警方)可以通过追踪你连接的基站来大致了解你的位置。许多智能手机用户还会使用依赖GPS的软件来精确确定自己的位置,这就是为什么Uber能准确找到你的位置来接你。十年前,在卡彭特诉美国案(2018年)中,最高法院裁定执法部门通常需要获得搜查令才能从运营商处获取你的位置信息。本周一(4月27日),法院将审理后续案件——查特里诉美国案,该案件提出了卡彭特案未解决的多个问题。例如,当警方获得搜查令使用手机数据时,该搜查令应包含哪些内容?允许警方获取多少人的位置信息?政府何时可以获取无辜人士的位置数据?如果用户自愿使用像谷歌地图中用于追踪位置的服务,是否会影响隐私保护?互联网公司是否只需提供匿名数据,而何时需要披露用户身份?更广泛地说,现代技术使政府能够以宪法制定时难以想象的方式侵犯每个人的隐私。最高法院对此问题非常清楚,并在过去几十年里努力确保其对第四修正案的解释(限制政府在未获许可的情况下搜查个人、住宅、文件和物品)能跟上技术进步的步伐。正如法院在基洛诉美国案(2001年)中所指出的,目标是“确保在第四修正案通过时存在的隐私水平不受政府侵犯”。然而,法院对这一公民自由主义项目的承诺也显得不稳定。卡彭特案最初确立了警方在使用手机数据追踪嫌疑人时必须获得搜查令,但该案以5比4的投票结果通过,且两位多数派大法官——鲁斯·巴德·金斯伯格和斯蒂芬·布雷耶已离任(尽管布雷耶被凯坦吉·布朗·杰克逊取代,后者通常持相似观点)。尼尔·戈萨奇在该案中撰写了混乱的反对意见,认为过去六十年的第四修正案相关判例大多错误。因此,戈萨奇被视为一个不确定因素,他的投票在查特里案中难以预测。

查特里案涉及“地理围栏”搜查令,即警方可以获取特定时间段内曾在某一区域的人的位置数据。在弗吉尼亚州米德洛斯汀的一起银行抢劫案调查中,警方获得了一项搜查令,要求谷歌提供在抢劫发生前一小时曾在银行或附近教堂区域的人的位置数据。谷歌拥有这些信息,是因为其“位置历史”功能会追踪并存储许多手机的位置。这些数据可用于识别使用谷歌地图等应用的用户,也可用于分析用户可能看到的广告。政府在简报中强调,只有约三分之一的谷歌账户用户启用了“位置历史”功能,而被告律师则指出,超过5亿用户已启用该功能。搜查令还规定了一个三步流程,以限制政府使用位置信息的能力:首先,谷歌提供匿名信息,涉及19名在特定区域出现的人;随后,警方请求并获取其中9人的具体位置信息;最后,警方获取这三人身份,包括查特里本人,他最终因抢劫罪被定罪。因此,查特里案并非警方完全无视宪法,也不是他们可以随意调查的案例。警方确实获得了搜查令,并且该令限定了追踪范围和获取身份的程序。问题是,这种搜查令和程序是否足够,或者宪法是否要求更严格的限制(或更宽松的权限)。

最高法院对第四修正案的现代理解始于1967年的卡兹诉美国案,该案确立了警方在监听电话对话前必须获得搜查令。然而,卡兹案确立的“合理隐私期待”原则较为模糊。正如约翰·马歇尔·哈兰大法官在附议意见中总结的,第四修正案案件通常取决于个人是否对警方的搜查有“合理的隐私期待”。在后续案件中,法院进一步解释了这一概念。例如,尽管卡兹案保护了电话对话内容,但1979年的史密斯诉马里兰州案指出,警方无需搜查令即可获取用户拨打的电话号码,因为这些号码必须通过第三方(电话公司)传递。类似地,虽然第四修正案通常要求警方在未经同意的情况下搜查住宅需获得搜查令,但如果警察在公共街道上看到某人正在犯罪,他们并未违反该修正案。在加利福尼亚诉西拉洛案(1986年)中,法院表示:“第四修正案并未要求警方在公共街道上经过住宅时必须遮住眼睛。”然而,进入21世纪后,法院开始担忧其20世纪的判例未能充分保护隐私免受过度执法的侵害。例如,在基洛案中,联邦特工使用热成像设备检测住宅内部温度,发现异常高温后申请搜查令,最终查获大麻。根据西拉洛案的判例,特工可能无需搜查令即可使用该设备,但法院认为,如果不更新对第四修正案的理解,警察技术可能会侵蚀该修正案保障的隐私权。因此,法院裁定,当警方使用“未普遍使用”的技术调查住宅时,必须获得搜查令。同样,在卡彭特案中,五位大法官裁定执法部门通常需要搜查令才能使用某些手机位置数据追踪嫌疑人。根据史密斯案,政府有理由认为这些数据不受第四修正案保护,因为用户自愿将位置信息共享给运营商。但多数意见认为,这种无限制的访问可能让政府窥探到个人最私密的生活。卡彭特案指出,位置数据不仅揭示个人的行动轨迹,还可能暴露其家庭、政治、职业、宗教和性取向等关联。因此,政府在追踪某人是否参加工会集会、面试新工作或与家人或上司不认同的人发生关系前,应获得搜查令。

然而,涉及新技术的第四修正案案件充满不确定性。查特里案中的一个关键问题是,法院是否仍普遍认为技术进步可能侵蚀第四修正案的保护。卡彭特案以5比4通过,但两位多数派大法官已离任,其中一位被更保守的艾米·康妮·巴雷特取代,另一位则由布雷特·卡瓦诺取代。查特里案是卡瓦诺首次参与此类案件,他是否支持扩大第四修正案的适用范围尚不明确。此外,戈萨奇在卡彭特案中反对意见认为,应放弃卡兹案中的“合理隐私期待”框架,转而关注手机用户是否拥有该数据的所有权。由于戈萨奇的反对意见过于注重理论而缺乏实际案例的指导,他的投票方向难以预测(尽管查特里案的律师在简报中详细讨论了财产法)。因此,查特里案的判决结果存在不确定性。我们无法准确了解几位关键大法官对第四修正案的态度,而法院最近的判例也表明,律师不能再依赖先例来预测该修正案如何适用于新技术。然而,此案的利害关系极高。如果法院允许政府过度获取位置信息,特朗普政府可能获得参加政治集会等行为的多年数据。正如卡彭特案所述,政府可以通过手机追踪你的政治、商业、宗教和性取向关系。同时,警方应能利用手机数据追踪并逮捕银行劫匪。因此,问题在于法院是否能找到一种方法,让警方使用手机数据协助执法,同时不侵犯无辜者的权利。第四修正案并未设想一个没有警方调查的世界,而是要求警方在进行某些隐私侵犯行为前获得搜查令,并限制该搜查令的授权范围。关键在于,这个不断变化的法院是否能正确平衡隐私权与执法需求。


---------------
Vance holds a smartphone up to a microphone at an event.
Vice President JD Vance holds a highly sophisticated tracking device that the government can use to monitor his every move. | Jonathan Ernst-Pool/Getty Images

Check your pocket. You’re probably carrying a tracking device that will allow the police — or even the Trump administration — to track every move that you make.

If you use a cellphone, you are unavoidably revealing your location all the time. Cellphones typically receive service by connecting to a nearby communications tower or other “cell site,” so your cellular provider (and, potentially, the police) can get a decent sense of where you are located by tracking which cell site your phone is currently connected with. Many smartphone users also use apps that rely on GPS to precisely determine their location. That’s why Uber knows where to pick you up when you summon a car.

Nearly a decade ago, in Carpenter v. United States (2018), the Supreme Court determined that law enforcement typically must secure a warrant before they can obtain data revealing where you’ve been from your cellular provider. On Monday, April 27, the Court will hear a follow-up case, known as Chatrie v. United States, which raises several questions that were not answered by Carpenter.

For starters, when police do obtain a warrant allowing them to use cellphone data, what should the warrant say — and just how much location information should the warrant permit the police to learn about how many people? When may the government obtain location data about innocent people who are not suspected of a crime? Does it matter if a cellphone user voluntarily opts into a service, such as the service Google uses to track their location when they ask for directions on Google Maps, that can reveal an extraordinary amount of information about where they’ve been? Should internet-based companies turn over only anonymized data, and when should the identity of a particular cellphone user be revealed? 

More broadly, modern technology enables the government to invade everyone’s privacy in ways that would have been unimaginable when the Constitution was framed. The Supreme Court is well aware of this problem, and it has spent the past several decades trying to make sure that its interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which constrains when the government may search our “persons, houses, papers, and effects” for evidence of a crime, keeps up with technological progress. 

As the Court indicated in Kyllo v. United States (2001), the goal is to ensure the “preservation of that degree of privacy against government that existed when the Fourth Amendment was adopted.” More advanced surveillance technology demands more robust constitutional safeguards.

But the Court’s commitment to this civil libertarian project is also precarious. Carpenter, the case that initially established that police must obtain a warrant before using your cell phone data to figure out where you’ve been, was a 5-4 decision. And two members of the majority in Carpenter, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer, are no longer on the Court (although Breyer was replaced by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who generally shares his approach to constitutional privacy cases). Justice Neil Gorsuch also wrote a chaotic dissent in Carpenter, suggesting that most of the past six decades’ worth of Supreme Court cases interpreting the Fourth Amendment are wrong. So it’s fair to say that Gorsuch is a wild card whose vote in Chatrie is difficult to predict.

It remains to be seen, in other words, whether the Supreme Court is still committed to preserving Americans’ privacy even as technology advances — and whether there are still five votes for the civil libertarian approach taken in Carpenter.

Geofence warrants, explained

Chatrie concerns “geofence” warrants, court orders that permit police to obtain locational data from many people who were in a certain area at a certain time. 

During their investigation of a bank robbery in Midlothian, Virginia, police obtained a warrant calling for Google to turn over location data on anyone who was present near the bank within an hour of the robbery. The warrant drew a circle with a 150-meter radius that included both the bank and a nearby church. 

Google had this information because of an optional feature called “Location History,” which tracks and stores where many cellphones are located. This data can then be used to pinpoint users who use apps like Google Maps to help them navigate, and also to collect data that Google can use to determine which ads are shown to which customers.

The government emphasizes in its brief that “only about one-third of active Google account holders actually opted into the Location History service,” while lawyers for the defendant, Okello Chatrie, point out that “over 500 million Google users have Location History enabled.”

The warrant also laid out a three-step process imposing some limits on the government’s ability to use the location information it obtained. At the first stage, Google provided anonymized information on 19 individuals who were present within the circle during the relevant period. Police then requested and received more location data on nine of these individuals, essentially showing law enforcement where these nine people were shortly before and shortly after the original one-hour period. Police then sought and received the identity of three of these individuals, including Chatrie, who was eventually convicted of the robbery.

Chatrie, in other words, is not a case where police simply ignored the Constitution, or where they were given free rein to conduct whatever investigation they wanted. Law enforcement did, in fact, obtain a warrant before it used geolocation data to track down Chatrie. And that warrant did, in fact, lay out a process that limited law enforcement’s ability to track too many people or to learn the identities of the people who were tracked.

The question is whether this particular warrant and this particular process were good enough, or whether the Constitution requires more (or, for that matter, less). And, as it turns out, the Supreme Court’s previous case law is not very helpful if you want to predict how the Court will resolve Fourth Amendment cases concerning new technologies.

The Court’s 21st-century cases expanded the Fourth Amendment to keep up with new surveillance technologies

The Court’s modern understanding of the Fourth Amendment, which protects against “unreasonable searches and seizures,” begins with Katz v. United States (1967), which held that police must obtain a warrant before they can listen to someone’s phone conversations. The broader rule that emerged from Katz, however, is quite vague. As Justice John Marshall Harlan summarized it in a concurring opinion, Fourth Amendment cases often turn on whether a person searched by police had a “reasonable expectation of privacy.”

The Court fleshed out what this phrase means in later cases. Though Katz held that the actual contents of a phone conversation are protected by the Fourth Amendment, for example, the Court held in Smith v. Maryland (1979) that police may learn which numbers a phone user dialed without obtaining a warrant. The Court reasoned that, while people reasonably expect that no one will listen in on their phone conversations, no one can reasonably think that the numbers they dial are private because these numbers must be conveyed to a third party — the phone company — before that company can connect their call.

Similarly, while the Fourth Amendment typically requires police to obtain a warrant before searching someone’s home without their consent, if a police officer witnesses someone committing a crime through the window of their home while the officer is standing on a public street, the officer has not violated the Fourth Amendment. As the Court put it in California v. Ciraolo (1986), “the Fourth Amendment protection of the home has never been extended to require law enforcement officers to shield their eyes when passing by a home on public thoroughfares.”

As the sun rose on the 21st century, however, the Court began to worry that the fine distinctions it drew in its 20th-century cases no longer gave adequate protection against overzealous police. 

In Kyllo, for example, a federal agent used a thermal-imaging device on a criminal suspect’s home, which allowed the agent to detect if parts of the home were unusually hot. After discovering that parts of the home were, in fact, “substantially warmer than neighboring homes,” the agent used that evidence to obtain a warrant to search the home for marijuana — the heat came from high-powered lights used to grow cannabis.

Under cases like Ciraolo, this agent had a strong argument that he could use this device without first obtaining a warrant. If law enforcement officers may gather evidence of a crime by peering into someone’s windows from a nearby street, why couldn’t they also measure the temperature of a house from that same street? But a majority of the justices worried in Kyllo that, if they do not update their understanding of the Fourth Amendment to account for new inventions, they will “permit police technology to erode the privacy guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.” 

Devices existed in 2001, when Kyllo was decided, that would allow police to invade people’s privacy in ways that were unimaginable when the Fourth Amendment was ratified. So, unless the Court was willing to see that amendment eroded into nothingness, they needed to read it more expansively. And so the Court concluded that, when police use technology that is “not in general public use” to investigate someone’s home, they need to obtain a warrant first.

Similarly, in Carpenter, five justices concluded that law enforcement typically must obtain a warrant before they can use certain cellphone location data to track potential suspects. 

Under Smith, the government had a strong argument that this data is not protected by the Fourth Amendment. Much like the numbers that we dial on our phones, cellphone users voluntarily share their location data with the cellphone company. And so Smith indicates that cellphone users do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy regarding that data.

But a majority of the Court rejected this argument, because they were concerned that giving police unfettered access to our location data would give the government an intolerable window into our most private lives. Location data, Carpenter explained, reveals not only an individual’s “particular movements, but through them his ‘familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations.’” Before the government can track whether someone has attended a union meeting, interviewed for a new job, or had sex with someone their family or boss may disapprove of, it should obtain a warrant.

Why a cloud of uncertainty hangs over every Fourth Amendment case involving new technology

One of the most uncertain questions in Chatrie is whether the Kyllo and Carpenter Court’s concern that advancing technology can swallow the Fourth Amendment is still shared by a majority of the Court. Again, Carpenter was a 5-4 decision, and two members of the majority have since left the Court. One of those justices, Ginsburg, was replaced by the much more conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, who dissented in Carpenter, was also replaced by Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Chatrie is Kavanaugh’s first opportunity, since he joined the Court in 2018, to weigh in on whether he believes that advancing technology demands a more expansive Fourth Amendment.

And then there’s Gorsuch, who wrote a dissent in Carpenter arguing that Katz’s “reasonable expectation of privacy” framework should be abandoned, and that the right question to ask in a case about cellphone data is whether the phone user owns that data. After a long windup about Fourth Amendment theory, Gorsuch’s dissent concludes with an unsatisfying four paragraphs saying that he can’t decide who owned the cellphone data at issue in Carpenter because the defendant’s lawyers “did not invoke the law of property or any analogies to the common law.” 

Because Gorsuch’s opinion focuses so heavily on high-level theory and so little on how that theory should be applied to an actual case, it’s hard to predict where he will land in Chatrie. (Though it’s worth noting that Chatrie’s lawyers do spend a good deal of time discussing property law in their brief.)

All of which is a long way of saying that the outcome in Chatrie is uncertain. We don’t know very much about how several key justices approach the Fourth Amendment. And the Court’s most recent Fourth Amendment cases suggest that lawyers can no longer rely on precedent to predict how the amendment applies to new technology.

But the stakes in this case are extraordinarily high. If the Court gives the government too much access to this information, the Trump administration could potentially gain access to years’ worth of location data on anyone who has ever attended a political protest. As the Court said in Carpenter, the government can use your cellphone to track all of your political, business, religious, and sexual relations. 

At the same time, the police should be able to track down and arrest bank robbers. So, if there is a way to use cellphone data to assist law enforcement without intruding upon the rights of innocents, then the courts should allow it. The Fourth Amendment does not imagine a world without police investigations. It calls for police to obtain a warrant, while also placing limits on what that warrant can authorize, before they commit certain breaches of individual privacy.

The question is whether this Court, with its shifting membership and uncertain commitment to keeping up with new surveillance technology, can strike the appropriate balance.

批评以色列的人正在民主党内取得优势

2026-04-20 18:00:00

美国参议员伯尼·桑德斯(I-VT)周三提出了一项决议,阻止向以色列出售军事装备,该决议获得了47名民主党参议员中的40名支持。这一事件标志着民主党内部对以色列的支持出现显著转变,坚定支持以色列的民主党人正变得越来越少。此前,民主党选民对以色列的负面看法仅占53%,但自2023年10月7日哈马斯袭击事件后,以色列在加沙的军事行动导致其国际声誉受损,加上特朗普政府与以色列联手对伊朗发动战争,使得民主党选民对以色列的负面看法升至80%。这一变化促使政界人士调整立场,不仅限于传统支持以色列的蓝州或进步派地区,甚至包括一些摇摆州的议员,如亚利桑那州的马克·凯利和鲁本·加莱戈、佐治亚州的乔恩·奥斯索夫以及密歇根州的埃莉莎·斯洛金。

然而,民主党内部的分歧依然存在。一方面,左翼活动人士呼吁对以色列施加更严厉的压力,例如切断对“防御性武器”的资助(如“铁穹”导弹防御系统),或彻底停止对以色列的直接军事援助;另一方面,部分温和派仍希望维持与以色列的盟友关系。J Street主席杰里米·本·阿米表示,虽然需要重新评估美以关系,但并不意味着要放弃对以色列的支持。而左翼活动人士则更倾向于推动美以关系的疏远。

这种分歧在新泽西州第11选区的特别选举中有所体现。尽管以色列支持团体AIPAC投入巨资试图击败温和派候选人汤姆·马林斯基,但左翼候选人安娜莉亚·梅亚仍以强硬反以色列立场赢得选举。这反映出民主党内部对以色列态度的分裂。此外,部分左翼团体还呼吁将以色列在加沙的战争定性为“种族灭绝”,并借鉴南非种族隔离制度的制裁模式。

尽管民主党内部对施压以色列达成共识,但如何实施仍存在争议。一些人认为,随着以色列经济实力增强,美国援助已不再必要,而另一些人则担心若民主党在2028年重新掌权,需面对如何调整对以色列政策的难题。目前,民主党高层及关键组织(如DNC、国会和参议院领导)的态度仍较为保守,但随着选民立场的转变,未来可能面临更严峻的挑战。


---------------
Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez stand together.
Sen Bernie Sanders (I-VT) put forth a resolution to block a military sale to Israel that won support from 40 of 47 Senate Democrats Wednesday. | Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

The politics of Israel have shifted inside the Democratic Party — and staunch defenders of the Jewish nation are growing scarcer and scarcer. 

On Wednesday, 40 out of 47 Democratic senators voted to block a military sale to Israel — far higher opposition than had been previously seen on any similar measure. It was the most dramatic sign yet of the party’s rapid turn toward a more confrontational approach, and one that Democratic supporters and critics of Israel alike believe is nowhere near finished.

The tally left pro-Israel Democrats “shocked and disillusioned,” Marc Rod of the publication Jewish Insider reported. These divides were on display on Thursday, when voters in New Jersey’s 11th District elected Analilia Mejia, who ran as a fierce left-wing critic of Israel in a special House election. While she won handily, historic Jewish towns like Livingston and Milburn swung against her by massive double-digit margins compared to their presidential vote, a rarity in an otherwise strongly Democratic year. 

“It’s disturbing for supporters of Israel who’ve long needed and counted on bipartisan support — and had it,” a Democratic operative who has long been involved in Jewish causes told me. “It’s growing, and it’s hard to tell where it’s going to end up, but it’s not good.” 

But while the old pro-Israel consensus of bipartisan unconditional aid is clearly dead, reaching a new one will be harder. Operatives in different camps across the Democratic spectrum are unsure how far the current trend will go, and whether Israel faces a mere correction in its relationship or risks fully falling out of the US orbit in a future administration.

The reason for the change, however, is straightforward: Democrats’ voters have shifted. 

Back in 2022, a slight majority of Democratic voters — 53 percent — viewed Israel unfavorably. Since then, the devastation Israel brought about in Gaza in response to Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attacks gravely damaged the country’s reputation — as has the new Iran war President Donald Trump launched alongside Israel this year.

Now, a whopping 80 percent of Democrats or adults who lean toward Democrats view Israel unfavorably, per Pew Research polling conducted last month. 

As a result, politicians are responding — and not just those in safe blue states or progressive jurisdictions. The 40 senators who voted to block the military sale Wednesday included several who are from swing states and are rumored to have presidential ambitions: Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego from Arizona, Jon Ossoff of Georgia, and Elissa Slotkin of Michigan.

The shift has been slower among leaders of the party and its key organizations: the DNC, House and Senate leadership, and party fundraising committees. These officials, such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who voted to approve the arms sales to Israel Wednesday, have condemned the Iran war and criticized Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s policies, while trying to make clear they still support the country as an ally.

But this may not be tenable, given how their party has moved underneath them. The issue will likely play a significant role in the 2028 primaries. The stakes are enormous — and activists critical of Israel feel encouraged by their success so far, and emboldened to push further.

Why and how Democratic voters turned against Israel

The collapse in Democratic support for Israel played out in three main phases.

Back during Barack Obama’s presidency, the progressive wing of the Democratic Party increasingly soured on Israel, as Netanyahu clashed with the Obama administration over Israel’s expansion of settlements in the West Bank and, most notably, Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran.

Indeed, Netanyahu came to Congress to give a speech condemning the Iran deal, seeming to align himself with Republicans and infuriating many Democrats. Still, outside of the activist world and plugged-in elites, Israel was rarely front-of-mind for Democratic voters in Trump’s first term or the first few years of Joe Biden’s presidency.

That changed with the Gaza war, which made Israel a constant topic on news and social media for years. An initial surge of sympathy for Israel after the October 7 attacks gave way to increasing horror over the civilian toll of its reprisals in Gaza — and Biden seemed either unwilling or unable to stop it. Meanwhile, Israeli leaders continued to disparage any talk of an eventual Palestinian state, which had long been the centerpiece of Democratic hopes for a durable peace in the region.

“This was a genocide that played out in real time and that had an impact. Kids were watching it,” James Zogby, a Democratic pollster who has advocated for the Palestinian cause inside the party since the 1970s, argued. Still, there was an age divide, with older Democrats much more likely to view Israel favorably.

Now, the events of Trump’s second term — in which the US has twice attacked Iran alongside Israel — has shaken that up, too. 

“Once Trump won, we started to see really massive polling changes among older Democrats who had supported Israel,” Hamid Bendaas of the Institute for Middle East Understanding Policy Project, a pro-Palestinian advocacy group, told me. “Part of that is the partisan-ization of Israel, seeing Netanyahu as a Trump ally.” 

The consequences playing out in Congress

Now, it’s increasingly a consensus inside the Democratic Party that tougher pressure tactics against Israel are called for — but there’s still disagreement over how far to go, with those on the left of the party pushing further.

With increasing opposition inside the party to financing “offensive” weapons for Israel, the left flank is now pushing to go further.

One idea is to cut off US financing for “defensive weaponry,” such as the interceptors used in the Iron Dome missile defense system that defends Israel from rockets fired by Hamas and Hezbollah (and which the US has spent billions to help finance). Some House progressives have recently backed this idea — though some of them stress that Israel should still be allowed to purchase defensive weaponry from the US with its own money.

Another is to end all direct US funding for Israel’s military, which the progressive Jewish group J Street called for this week. Rep. Alexandria-Ocasio Cortez (D-NY) recently voiced support for that idea. Many observers believe US policy is headed here, in part because Israel is now a very wealthy nation that doesn’t really need US aid.

“There’s a growing understanding that aid money is fungible and that any amount of aid that the US is giving frees up [Israel’s] own money to spend on things we don’t like,” Matt Duss, a former foreign policy adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders, told me. (Duss has reportedly been briefing Ocasio-Cortez, a potential 2028 presidential contender, on foreign policy this year.)

Asked what the next Democratic president should do upon taking office, Duss said he or she should immediately “halt all arms sales — not just to Israel, but generally to governments that have been engaged in human rights abuses.”

Some left activist groups have other priorities, such as urging Democrats to call Israel’s war in Gaza a genocide. Bendaas said his polling shows increased support for using sanctions on Israel similar to those used against apartheid South Africa.

“I do think that’s probably where the conversation is headed by 2028,” Bendaas said. “But the realms of possibility are moving so fast, it’s kind of hard to pin down sometimes.”

The deeper disagreement

The agreement among progressives that Israel needs to be pressured more masks a deeper disagreement over: to what end?

Several advocates I interviewed pointed to a divide between the progressives hoping to salvage the US-Israel relationship, versus the leftists who are willing or even eager to outright end it. 

What if the pressure tactics fail to change Israel’s security calculus, as they have so many times before?

Often these debates touch on fundamental differences in opinion about the legitimacy of the state — between “liberal Zionist” critics of Israel who also see a democratic Jewish nation as an important refuge for a historically oppressed minority and under dire threat from its neighbors, and “anti-Zionist” critics who are gaining ground in left-wing activism and see Israel as an inherently repressive entity built on ethnic supremacy and colonialism.

On the progressive side, J Street president Jeremy Ben-Ami told me that while there’s a need to reassess the terms of the US-Israel relationship, he was not seeking to reassess “the friendship” or “the notion that the United States is going to have Israel’s back.”

But on the left, said Bendaas, “There’s a set of folks who are more interested in: how do we actually separate and make the US and Israel less enmeshed in the future.”

The primary in New Jersey’s recent special election was emblematic of this split. The pro-Israel group AIPAC’s campaign arm spent millions to defeat not Mejia, but Tom Malinowski, a more moderate Democrat who was critical of Netanyahu and open to putting conditions on aid. Malinowski described himself as a “pro-Israel” voice seeking to correct a wayward ally; Mejia, the winning candidate, was harsher in her rhetoric and accused Israel of “genocide.” 

Progressives hoping to salvage the relationship are optimistic that Israel’s elections this year will depose Netanyahu for good, allowing for a reset with a fresh face. However, the more dovish Israeli left has long been in decline and polls show many of Netanyahu’s policies on Gaza, the West Bank, and Iran retain strong support among the Israeli people — making a sharp change in approach seem unlikely.

So what then? What if the pressure tactics fail to change Israel’s security calculus, as they have so many times before?

If the Democrats retake power in 2028, they’ll have to try and answer that question.

时间彩屑是否正在毁掉育儿?

2026-04-19 20:00:00

关于在养育孩子前必须攒够一定金额金钱的想法非常普遍,甚至像一种道德准则。但其实并非如此。最近有位读者问我,她是否太穷而无法生育孩子,我指出我们并不需要为孩子提供特定的物质财富。随后,我的编辑Katie Courage提出,作为父母,她同样面临“时间贫困”的困扰。她认为,虽然我们不必保证孩子拥有特定的金钱,但是否应该确保他们拥有足够的高质量陪伴时间呢?

Katie提到,尽管她安排了丰富的亲子活动和周末露营,但真正希望为孩子创造的是自由玩耍、阅读和自然漫步等无拘无束的时光。然而,为了实现这一目标,她常常不得不牺牲自己的休息和娱乐时间,这让她感到内疚和压力。她质疑,为何我们总是觉得时间不够,而实际上现代父母与孩子相处的时间比过去更多。

作者指出,这一现象与“足够”(enough)的概念有关。过去,父母的目标是让孩子成为经济上的助力,因此时间投入相对简单。但随着儿童劳动法的实施,孩子不再被视为经济资产,而是被情感化为“珍贵的宝贝”。这种转变导致现代父母将大量时间投入到各种“儿童活动”中,却忽视了日常琐事中的高质量互动。

作者认为,真正的关键在于“注意力的质量”而非时间的长短。例如,与孩子一起做晚饭、散步或处理日常事务时,若能全神贯注地给予关爱和陪伴,这些平凡时刻同样能培养孩子的同理心、合作精神和情绪管理能力。相反,“时间碎片化”(即“时间彩纸”)现象让父母的注意力被割裂,即使花了很多时间,也难以真正投入。

作者强调,我们不必追求“更多时间”,而是应专注于如何在现有时间中提供更有意义的关注。这需要父母训练自己的注意力,例如通过冥想、阅读、观察自然或减少科技干扰。尽管社会压力巨大,但父母无法控制所有结果,也不必在每个时刻都完美表现。最重要的是,尽可能在与孩子相处的每一刻投入专注的爱。

总结来说,作者主张父母应重新审视“时间贫困”的概念,将注意力从数量转向质量,通过日常互动传递爱与关怀,而非依赖高强度的活动安排。这不仅是对孩子的成长有益,也能让父母自身获得更充实的体验。


---------------
Illustration of a kid in the foreground with a busy parent in the background

The idea that you need to save up a certain amount of money before having kids is so common it can feel almost like a moral law. 

But it isn’t, and I said as much recently when a reader wrote in to my advice column asking if she’s too poor to have a baby. I argued that we don’t owe our kids a certain level of material wealth. 

And then I got a question from another parent: my editor, Katie Courage. She pointed out that what also plagues her as a parent is time poverty. Maybe we don’t have to guarantee kids a certain amount of money, but what about a certain amount of time?

Here’s Katie’s question, and my response below. 

Your latest column, responding to the reader who asked if she was too poor to bring another kid into the world, was refreshingly hope-inducing! Money questions around raising kids feel so ubiquitous no matter what circumstance your family is in, so this was really worth reading for a totally flipped framework on the issue. 

The resource-scarcity concern that is perpetually circling in my mind, alongside the financial one, is time. As a working parent, I constantly feel time-poor, especially when it comes to quality time with my kids. 

So much of the time I get to have with them is consumed with the simple logistics of life. Evenings really only have room for dinner and bedtimes. Mornings are a blur of breakfasts, navigating clothing choices, work meetings, and school dropoffs. And a good portion of weekends go to simply fighting entropy (that is, laundry, cleaning, yardwork). We do pack in plenty of kid activities, time with friends, and weekend camping trips. But it seems like it would be so much better for my kids if I could materialize more undirected hours of puzzle-doing, book-reading, and rambling nature walks by the creek together. 

I was raised in the early days of intensive parenting (with so many amazing creek walks!), and I had my first child around the culmination of Instagram parenting influencers pushing this sort of style. If you’ve watched more than two episodes of Bluey, you’ve seen how this era calibrated expectations for parents to be almost constantly available for child-focused, child-directed activities. But if I let dishes pile up in order to play all weekend (as I read as an actual suggestion in a 2010s parenting book) or if I skip out on exercise to pick the kids up early, I know I won’t be showing up for the time together as energized and as minimally stressed as I can be. 

So I find myself in a constant inner battle, and the only winner is seemingly constant indistinct guilt. Is there a way of looking at this that feels less zero-sum? 

I really sympathize with this feeling of time poverty — and I bet almost every working parent does, too. But I want to share some research that might make you feel better. 

First, you’re actually spending a lot of time with your kids, relative to middle-class parents of the not-too-distant past. Moms now spend more time with their kids than they did in 1965, even though the majority of moms weren’t in the paid workforce then. Dads are also doing more than they did back then.

So why does everyone I know still feel like they’re not hanging out with their kids enough? 

The problem has to do with that word “enough.” To know what constitutes enough of something, you have to know what goal you’re aiming for. Historically, this was pretty simple: Your goal was to raise kids who could work — typically on your farm, or maybe in a factory, mill, or mine. Sure, you also felt love for your kids, but at the end of the day children were an economic asset. You needed to feed and shelter them so they could produce income for the family. 

But in the 1930s, the United States banned oppressive child labor, and kids stopped being wage earners. Now that they were economically worthless, we had to ask ourselves: What role do they play in our lives? Our collective answer was to sentimentalize them more than ever before — to treat them as precious, not financially, but emotionally. 

As author Jennifer Senior has documented, our collective script about parenting flipped upside down in the decades between then and now. Kids no longer work for their parents; instead, parents work for their kids. And what’s the ultimate goal of the modern parent? Buttonhole one of them in the street and they’ll tell you: “I just want my kids to be happy!!” (potentially with some soul-rattling desperation in their voice).

Trouble is, happiness is a very elusive goal. Even a single ingredient of it, professional success, is elusive — and getting more so by the day. And so we end up with the intensive parenting culture you described, where parents expect themselves to spend endless hours on stuff that they hope will enrich their kids, boosting their self-esteem, their skills, and ultimately, their success. Music lessons, soccer games, karate, chess, elaborate craft projects, and the long et cetera of child-focused activities. 

But pursuing happiness is an unbounded search process. You could spend every waking hour doing child-focused activities with your kid and it still might not be “enough” to make them a happy adult (in fact, it very well may backfire). 

An outcome is impossible to guarantee. But a capacity? That’s something you can much more reliably cultivate.

Have a question you want me to answer in the next Your Mileage May Vary column?

Just fill out this anonymous form! Newsletter subscribers will get my column before anyone else does, and their questions will be prioritized for future editions. Sign up here.

So, what if you don’t see it as your goal to guarantee your kids’ happiness? What if instead the goal is to show them love and build their capacity to love others?

In that case, quantity of hours will matter much less than — you guessed it — quality. And we all know what “quality time” means. Right? 

Honestly, I don’t think we do. Many American parents tend to assume that “quality time” means time explicitly dedicated to Activities For Kids. But as books like Hunt, Gather, Parent and The Importance of Being Little show, there’s reason to believe that much more mundane stuff works wonders, too. 

Young children can learn a whole lot from being woven into whatever their parents happen to be doing — cooking, yardwork, errands. They can learn practical life skills, yes, but also things like perseverance, cooperation, and emotional regulation. And they can benefit immensely from exactly the kind of low-key interaction that parents dismiss as “not counting.” I’m talking about all the stuff you called “the simple logistics of life” — dinnertimes, bedtimes, school drop-offs. That’s because any of that stuff can be the site of loving, playful interaction.  

I was raised by my dad and grandmother, and the moments that stand out in my mind now aren’t the ones that happened on special outings. They’re banal in the extreme. My very first memory is of my dad tucking me in at bedtime and telling me a story, and me feeling so happy that I said, “I love being 4 — I get all of the fun and none of the responsibilities!” I also remember helping my grandmother make dinner, and how she laughed with extreme delight when I picked up a cucumber and began talking into it like it was a phone. And I remember her walking me to school and how we checked out the neighbors’ amazing gardens on the way, making a game out of noticing the best one and giving it an imaginary award. 

Nothing “special” was happening during these moments. There was no “activity.” There was no set-apart “quality time” bucket, or even an explicit goal of hanging out together. We were just life-ing. 

But in these brief moments, there was a loving attunement to what I was doing and feeling. There was a wholeness of attention.

Contrast that with “time confetti” — a term, coined by author Brigid Schulte, to describe how our time now often gets fragmented into tiny little pieces that end up feeling unproductive and unfulfilling. We may think we’re “multitasking.” But when you’re trying to do bathtime with your kid while simultaneously attending to intermittent pings on your work Slack or worrying about the half-dozen emails you need to send and the three playdates you need to schedule and all the group texts you need to respond to…well. It’s not just your time but also your attention that gets carved up into little splinters. 

If you recognize yourself in this description, it’s not your fault. Both our work culture and our technological culture conspire to shred our time like this. 

What I find helpful about the idea of time confetti is that it explains why, even though the objective amount of time that we spend with our kids is actually greater now than it was a few decades ago, the subjective feeling of time poverty is going up, not down. Feeling time-poor is not just about the brute quantity of time we’ve got, but about the kind of attention we can bring to it.

A short moment of bathtime where a parent is truly present is small but whole. And that tends to feel more fulfilling for both adults and children. (Not to brag, but little kids love me, and I’m convinced it’s because the style of loving attention my caregivers gave me really modeled for me how to lovingly attend to others in turn.) 

What all this indicates to me is not that we need to spend more time with our kids, or that we need to spend more time doing Activities for Kids, but that we can do a whole lot of good by focusing on the quality of attention we offer while we do literally whatever we happen to be doing when our kids are around. 

And this is actually good news, because, while it’s hard to manufacture more time in the day, we can train our attention. My personal favorite ways of doing that are through meditation, birding, reading longform fiction, and observing a tech-free Sabbath, but there are plenty of other ways. 

Do I think it’s fair for the burden to fall on the individual to counter the massive societal pressures that push us all toward fractured attention? No, absolutely not. And because this is a structural issue, we’ll all inevitably have moments when we don’t manage to be mentally present. That’s okay. 

You can’t control every outcome for your child, and you can’t fully control how you show up for every moment you’re with them, either. The most you can do is try, as much as possible, to infuse focused loving attention into the moments you’ve got. 

如何应对工作倦怠 首先,识别工作倦怠的迹象,例如持续疲劳、缺乏动力、情绪耗竭等。其次,分析导致倦怠的原因,如工作量过大、缺乏控制感、工作与生活失衡或缺乏认可。解决方法包括:合理安排工作时间,适当休息,学会时间管理,优先处理重要任务,必要时委派任务;改善工作环境,与同事或上级沟通寻求支持,调整工作负荷;注重自我照顾,保持规律作息,培养兴趣爱好,进行体育锻炼,尝试正念冥想等放松方式;若情况严重,应及时寻求专业心理咨询或治疗。此外,可向公司提出改善建议,如推行弹性工作制、设立心理健康日等。若倦怠持续不缓解,务必及时寻求帮助。

2026-04-19 19:00:00

乔纳森·马莱西克(Jonathan Malesic)亲身经历了职业倦怠。他曾梦想在宾夕法尼亚州的一所小型天主教学院任教,发表论文、追求终身教职,做着教授们认为重要的事情。然而,某一天他突然感到疲惫不堪,甚至害怕上班。“我总是筋疲力尽,对工作感到恐惧。”他在Vox的播客《Explain It to Me》中说道。由于学生缺乏热情、预算危机以及目睹同事被裁员,他感到焦虑和“无用”。最终,他意识到必须做出改变,离开了学术界,但对导致自己职业倦怠的原因仍感到好奇。他发现,答案正是职业倦怠。他研究了心理学教授克里斯蒂娜·马斯拉赫(Christina Maslach)的理论,后者专门研究职业倦怠。马莱西克解释说,职业倦怠有三个维度:第一是持续性的疲惫感,这种疲惫无法通过休息缓解;第二是冷漠或去人性化,表现为对他人缺乏尊重,可能引发愤怒、八卦和挫败感;第三是无力感,认为自己的工作没有意义或无法产生价值。他通过马斯拉赫的职业倦怠量表测试,发现自己在疲惫维度上处于第98百分位。他指出,美国社会高度重视工作,人们将自我价值与工作紧密联系在一起。他后来撰写了《职业倦怠的终结:为何工作消耗我们,以及如何构建更好的生活》一书。

丹妮尔·罗伯茨(Danielle Roberts)也有类似经历。在疫情期间被裁员后,她开始寻求工作与生活的平衡,并最终成为职业教练,帮助他人找到平衡。她自称为“反职业教练”,认为如今“梦想工作”并不存在,人们需要反思导致职业倦怠的系统性问题,而不是将其视为个人或职业上的弱点。她强调,不同世代对职业倦怠的体验不同:老一辈更多表现为身体上的疲惫,X世代则更多是心理上的,而千禧一代和Z世代则更倾向于情感和存在层面的倦怠,因为他们从小被灌输“工作等于价值”。罗伯茨认为,Z世代在应对职业倦怠上展现出不同的态度,他们更注重设定界限,以避免被系统性问题压垮。她指出,人们常误以为Z世代懒惰或自我中心,但实际上他们目睹了父母辈因公司裁员而失去工作的经历,也看到千禧一代为偿还学生贷款而不得不从事多份工作,因此对过度投入工作持否定态度。

如何预防职业倦怠?罗伯茨建议从面试阶段开始,注意公司描述的语言。如果公司用“家庭”来形容自身,这可能是一个警示信号。在入职过程中,应尽早与经理沟通自己的需求,例如通过“工作风格问卷”了解自己在压力下的需求、接受反馈的方式以及会议参与风格。这有助于在工作中获得更多的自主权和掌控感。她还提到,现代社会工作压力大,生活成本高,离职或设立界限变得困难。如果无法离职,可以通过“能量管理审计”来追踪一周的时间安排,分析自己的能量模式,并调整时间或环境以维持精力。例如,可以不开摄像头参加会议,或在疲惫时短暂起身活动、听喜欢的音乐。此外,她警告不要过度工作或独自承担所有任务,因为这会加剧倦怠。她强调,职业倦怠是系统性问题,不能仅靠自我调节解决。有时,我们需要让一些负担“掉落”并接受现实,这样才能促使公司提供支持。


---------------
One burnt match is seen in a row of unused matches with red matchheads.

Jonathan Malesic knows burnout firsthand. He was working his dream job, teaching at a small Catholic college in Pennsylvania. He was publishing papers, working toward tenure — doing all the things on the professor checklist. He was happy; until one day, he wasn’t.

“I was constantly exhausted. I dreaded going to work,” Malesic told Explain It to Me, Vox’s weekly call-in podcast. A combination of unenthusiastic students, a budget crisis, and seeing colleagues let go had him on edge and feeling “sort of useless.” He didn’t recognize himself.

Eventually, he realized something had to give. He left academia, but remained curious about what derailed his career. It turns out, the answer was burnout. He discovered the work of psychology professor Christina Maslach, who literally wrote the book on burnout. 

“There are three dimensions to burnout,” Malesic explained. “The first is exhaustion, and the exhaustion is something that has to be chronic. You can’t be burned out for a week or a month. It’s a kind of exhaustion that does not improve with rest. The second dimension is called cynicism or sometimes depersonalization: You treat people as not full persons. And that can manifest itself in anger, gossip, and frustration. And the third dimension is a sense of ineffectiveness, a feeling that your work is not accomplishing anything.”

Malesic took the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the standard test that measures burnout, and he found he was in the 98th percentile for exhaustion. “In American society, we value work so highly,” he said. “We put so much of our identity and self-worth into work.” Eventually, he wrote a book called The End of Burnout: Why Work Drains Us and How to Build Better Lives.

Danielle Roberts had a similar experience. After a pandemic layoff, she started to seek out balance. She found it, and now, as a career coach, she helps other people find it too. Or as she likes to say: as an anti-career coach. 

“I think we are at a point where dream jobs don’t exist,” she told Explain It to Me. “We have to start questioning the systems and the structures that are causing burnout in the first place, rather than making it a personal problem or a professional weakness.”

So how do you do that? And what are the different ways burnout has manifested itself through the decades? Roberts breaks it down for the latest episode of Explain It to Me.

Below is an excerpt of our conversation, edited for length and clarity. You can listen to the full episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you’d like to submit a question, send an email to [email protected] or call 1-800-618-8545.

Has burnout always been a thing? Or is it just a young person’s game? 

I grew up in a blue-collar family and was one of five kids. My dad did tile and marble for a living for 40 years. He just retired and what he got for a lifetime of hard work was a broken body and a pin to say “thank you for your service.” 

For older generations, their burnout often looked more physical. Gen X, their burnout often looks more mental. And then millennials and Gen Z, our burnout often looks more emotional and existential because we were taught that our work equals our worth and to pour so much of ourselves into it. 

It’s not that one generation is more burnt-out than the other; it’s just that it manifests differently based on the world in which we grew up.

What do you notice about how Gen Z is approaching burnout differently?

We can learn so much from Gen Z and what they are teaching us about modeling the boundaries that would’ve prevented all of us from burning out in the first place. 

We often hear that they’re lazy and entitled and that nobody wants to work anymore, but think about what they witnessed growing up. They saw their parents or their friends’ parents be loyal to companies that laid them off. They saw millennials put themselves through college and get a tremendous amount of student debt just to be laid off or have to work multiple jobs to make ends meet. I think they are looking at everything that other generations have done and saying, “No, thank you.”

Are there ways to avoid burnout at work in the first place?

It all starts in the interview process and being mindful of what to look out for in the language that your team uses. If people are describing their company like a family, run. That is a red flag. I don’t know about anybody else’s family, but mine is full of dysfunction and you’re expected to give a lot, and not always get a ton in return. 

Then when you are in the onboarding process, start talking about what you need from your manager early on. There’s something called a working styles worksheet, and it includes questions like, “When I’m stressed, what I need most from my coworkers is blank. The best way I receive feedback is blank. My meeting participation style is blank.” That will give you a lot of agency and autonomy in how you show up in your work and how you allow other people to treat you. We teach other people how to treat us.

These days, it’s hard to get a job in the first place, on top of the cost of housing and health care and so many things. That makes leaving a job or even having boundaries at the job you have now really, really hard. 

If you can’t afford to quit your job, are there steps you can take to prevent burnout?

The world is a dumpster fire right now and the job market is trash. That said, you do still have agency within your days. 

There’s something called an energy management audit where for a week, you track your time from the moment you wake up to the moment you go to bed and you figure out what your energy patterns are, then see what you can do to either redesign your time or change up your environment to sustain your energy levels. 

In a workplace that could look like taking a meeting with your camera off or going on a walk. Or if you know you have a particularly draining meeting at 12 pm every single day, you take a five-minute block and get up and just shake out your nervous system, do some jumping jacks, put on your favorite song. You can just close your eyes and give yourself that rest for 30 seconds. You can set a reminder on your phone to do a breathing exercise just to get back into your body a little bit more.

Is there anything you’d recommend not doing? Maybe something that feels good now, but ultimately in the long run is going to make it harder. 

Pushing when you have no more capacity or resources to push. And also thinking that you need to do it all by yourself. We live in a highly individualistic society. We take on so much emotional labor on top of the day-to-day. 

If you are feeling stuck on a problem at work or you’re feeling super stressed, the solution is not to push through and put in more hours. That is going to be not only a disservice to the work itself, it’s going to be a disservice to you. Look at your workload realistically and say, “What can fall off?” We can’t self-help our way out of systems of oppression or burnout. 

I think sometimes we really just need to let some of the plates fall and break, because if we continue to take on everything and our employers are like, “Oh, Danielle’s got it. She can keep doing all of this and it’s fine,” then they’re just going to continue to expect that out of me. But if I say, “I’m letting these two things fall and break and it’s the company’s responsibility to fix them,” then maybe I’ll actually finally get some help.

Rubén Gallego谈及他为何为Eric Swalwell辩护——以及为何现在后悔

2026-04-19 18:00:00

2025年10月23日,美国国会山。| 图片由Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc提供,经Getty Images授权

本月,众议员埃里克·斯瓦尔韦尔(Eric Swalwell)因性骚扰指控而被迫退出加州州长竞选。然而,这场丑闻的波及范围也波及到了亚利桑那州参议员鲁本·加尔维奥(Rubén Gallego),他原本是斯瓦尔韦尔的亲密盟友,曾支持其州长竞选、主持其2020年总统竞选活动,并投资其人工智能初创公司。如今,加尔维奥正试图与斯瓦尔韦尔保持距离,声称自己此前并不知情,也未听说过任何关于斯瓦尔韦尔不当行为的传闻。

在最近一次采访中,加尔维奥谈及了自己与斯瓦尔韦尔的关系。他提到,自己曾多次与斯瓦尔韦尔讨论相关问题,但从未发现任何实质性指控。他承认,华盛顿特区存在一种文化,许多政客可能表现出轻浮行为,但并未达到性骚扰或性侵的程度。他坦言,自己在判断上出现了失误,但强调自己更倾向于以普通人身份而非政治家身份面对问题,并表示自己与斯瓦尔韦尔不仅是工作伙伴,更是家庭朋友,曾一起共进晚餐、孩子一起参加夏令营。

加尔维奥还回应了外界对他判断力的质疑,表示自己并未将此事与2028年总统竞选直接关联,而是更关注如何成为更好的办公室主管和更称职的参议员。该访谈完整版将于4月25日播出,但Vox会员可提前观看。


---------------
Gallego walks with a reporters phone pointed at him
Gallego in the US Capitol on October 23, 2025. | Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

This month, Rep. Eric Swalwell faced a flood of sexual misconduct allegations, pushing him to drop out of the California governor’s race. But the scandal’s blast radius has also ensnared Sen. Rubén Gallego of Arizona, a potential presidential candidate in 2028 and one of Swalwell’s close allies before the stories broke. Gallego had endorsed Swalwell’s gubernatorial bid, chaired his 2020 presidential campaign, and invested in Swalwell’s AI startup.

But now, Gallego is distancing himself from the Congress member and arguing that he had no prior knowledge of the allegations. Gallego has also denied that he heard any rumors of Swalwell’s alleged sexual misconduct.

Recently, I sat down with Gallego for an upcoming episode of America, Actually. The conversation focuses on themes that have made Gallego a national name: immigration reform, outreach to Latino voters, and his advocacy for Democrats to do more outreach to men of color. However, considering the flood of questions about his close relationship with Swalwell, and the fact that Gallego has now earned the ire of some of the voices who helped bring the allegations to light, I also wanted to ask him about his former friend and ally.

Here’s what he said. The full episode will air Saturday, April 25, but will be available earlier this week for Vox Members. Join now on Patreon and get notified when it publishes. 

I don’t want to go too much longer without asking about the recent flood of sexual assault allegations against Congressman Eric Swalwell, who had called you his best friend.

You chaired his 2020 presidential campaign. You were financially involved in his AI startup. Did you have any knowledge of these allegations of misconduct or had you heard rumors of predatory behavior on the Hill? I wanted to ask you directly.

No. No clue, no knowledge of any of the allegations or predatory behavior. That was definitely not what any of us… and look, we’ve all been having conversations since we’re all actually going back…

Who do you mean by we?

Friends, members of Congress, other supporters. We’re all talking to each other to see: What did we do wrong? What did we not see? 

I want to just follow up, though, because it seems as if the scale of the allegations makes that — I guess it causes a gut check on that, because it seems as if this was a known thing among some on the Hill. This seems as if, certainly, there was a community of women who were organizing around this. You hadn’t heard anything about any of that?

Not about the allegations we’re talking about, the sexual assault, the predatory behavior. You know, there is a culture in DC that certainly exists — where not just him, but many other politicians — we heard of someone that’s being, you know, flirty. But never inappropriate, never predatory, never toward staff, and things of that nature. But look, this is the kind of thing that makes all of us relook at what we have been accepting versus not accepting. 

Part of the reason some of this has come back on you, though, is that you went out of your way to defend Swalwell just this month, writing recently on X that “Eric is a fighter.” 

Considering now what you know, or considering that you’re saying you heard rumors about him being flirty, why proactively defend him?

Well, for two reasons: [First] because we had heard this, about him, about other politicians, for a long time, and nothing had ever surfaced, right? Number two, he knew exactly what to say to me, because I had just gotten off a very hard 2024 campaign, where I had some of the worst things said about me on commercials that my kids have to see.

And [Swalwell’s team] and some of his staff pushed that button on me. And it was a mistake. I mean, without a doubt, it was a mistake. Let’s be clear: Knowing now everything I know of, I would never have done it. But knowing now everything I know, especially of sexual assault, sexually predatory [behavior], we would not have had the relationship that we had.

There have been some that have said that this is also a question of your judgment. I wanted you to respond to that. I mean, you’ve been kind of openly embracing the question of a 2028 race. What do you say to someone who looks at this situation and sees it as a cause to question you?

To be a hundred percent honest, you know, I am more human first than a politician. And my judgment was off because of many reasons. But number one, because I knew this man as a family man, first. We weren’t just work colleagues. Our families ate dinner together; our kids were in camps together. And I have to learn from this, and I will learn from this. 

But you know, for me, it’s not a 2028 question. It’s about what it means to be a better, first boss in my office, and also a better senator to my constituents.