Nicholas Goldberg is an associate editor and Op-Ed columnist for the Los Angeles Times. He previously served 11 years as editor of the editorial page and was also a former editor of the Op-Ed page and the Sunday Opinion section. While at New York Newsday in the 1980s and 1990s, Goldberg was a Middle East correspondent and political reporter. His writing has been published in the New Republic, New York Times, Vanity Fair, the Nation, Sunday Times of London and Washington Monthly, among other places. He is a graduate of Harvard University.
Latest From This Author
It’s no easy task to apply considered opinions to a world where no one has patience for nuance and belligerent certitude rules the day.
The six-volume Los Angeles Municipal Code, first compiled in 1936, includes a lot of dos and don’ts for pets, pigeons and hippos.
Injustice still defines too much policing and punishment. Can data-based advocacy resuscitate reform?
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s 2003 prediction that affirmative action college admissions would only last 25 more years may come true if the current court has its way. That would be tragic.
The centrist political group No Labels is threatening to put up a ‘unity’ candidate for president. But that’ll probably just reelect Trump.
A teenager committed a horrible murder at a South Carolina school. But he doesn’t deserve a life sentence with no possibility of release
Ugly new accusations and graphic details continue the United States’ deep slide into embarrassing tabloid territory.
The candidates running to succeed California’s senior senator stand to lose or gain if she resigns or sticks it out to finish her term.
With democracy in crisis, we all need what too many eighth-graders (and adults) are missing — proficiency in American history and civics.
The freshman congressman who lied about his jobs, schooling and more has been charged with fraud, theft, money laundering and lying. Is the story still funny?