Faithful Catholics Respond After Abuse Scandals: Commitments to Change and Belief in Pope Francis
Catholic readers explain how and why they plan to strengthen the church from within.
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Catholic readers explain how and why they plan to strengthen the church from within.
By LELA MOORE
Our executive editor, Dean Baquet, and managing editor, Joe Kahn, explain our thinking regarding bylines on our home page.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Our investigative reporter who spent 16 days covering the Paul Manafort trial, Sharon LaFraniere, answers our readers’ questions on Manafort’s conviction and Cohen’s guilty plea.
By KASIA PILAT
Do you have a story idea, a question for our newsroom or feedback on our coverage? Please let us know.
Readers have asked about the kind of public information requests our journalists make. Two of our investigative reporters explain how this worked with recent requests on President Trump’s Supreme Court nomination.
By STEVE EDER and BEN PROTESS
Editors on our Travel desk respond to criticism of a recent feature about retreats and sanctuaries in and around Los Angeles.
By LYNDA RICHARDSON and STEVE REDDICLIFFE
Several readers expressed concern with our use of the phrase “catch and release” in our immigration coverage. Our deputy National editor Kim Murphy reflects on their feedback.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
After readers expressed disappointment with The Times for how it handled issue No. 50 of Batman, several of our journalists responded to questions and feedback on our use of spoilers.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
A feature article in our Vows section included the ending of Batman No. 50. How should news organizations handle spoilers? Our journalists are available to answer your questions and respond to your feedback.
By LELA MOORE
The “lede-all,” which weaves together many different narrative threads, is one of journalism’s most important and challenging story forms.
By EMMA L. MCALEAVY
The Times’s standards editor explains why we sometimes allow sources to go unnamed.
By PHILIP B. CORBETT
Charlie Savage, a Times Washington correspondent, explains the legality and ethics of publishing confidential and/or classified information.
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
Part data scientists, part investigative journalists, our best-seller list editors apply rigorous standards of inclusion to sales reports from tens of thousands of stores across the United States.
By BEST-SELLER LISTS STAFF
Rogene Jacquette, The Times’s corrections editor, explains our process for correcting mistakes.
By ROGENE JACQUETTE
A dwindling salmon catch marks another entry among dozens of anecdotes about small, sad, mysterious ways climate change affects life here.
By JULIA O'MALLEY
As Tang Gongwei’s parents stopped cleaners, commuters, construction workers and shopkeepers to ask if they had seen him, our reporters peered into contemporary Chinese society.
By SUI-LEE WEE
Internet commentary can often be vicious, but fans of The Times’s crossword puzzle have forged a tight-knit and caring community.
By KATIE VAN SYCKLE
For our Corner Office columnist, an hour with a deeply emotional Mr. Musk was not just another C.E.O. interview.
By DAVID GELLES
The tech world presents itself as too complicated to understand. But Alastair Mactaggart, a privacy advocate I profiled, cracked it — and so can you.
By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
Readers who are college graduates offer advice to incoming freshmen who wonder if degrees are worth the hype.
By LELA MOORE
In many countries, children have the very freedoms that American parents can grant only by chafing against law or custom, our international readers say.
By LELA MOORE
People recovering from opioid addiction and their families discuss the financial and emotional costs of treatment.
By LELA MOORE
Childless women and men who are beyond their childbearing years reflect on their level of satisfaction with their lives.
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
Medical professionals and health care industry workers describe the hardships involved in trying to provide care in rural areas.
By KELLY VIRELLA