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(from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom

Here’s my message to America’s college students.

What I said on my recent campus tour.

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Kevin Warsh at a Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing | REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque, edited by Russell Nystrom
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The Virginia State House in Richmond, Virginia | Photo by Farragutful, Wikimedia Commons, edited by Russell Nystrom

Members-only posts

(from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom

Here’s my message to America’s college students.

What I said on my recent campus tour.
The Tangle team around a campfire during a team retreat in Vermont. Photo: Ari Weitzman

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Hanna Rönnberg Mother and Child, image from Picryl | edietd by Candida Hall

The Sunday — May 10

This is the Tangle Sunday Edition, a brief roundup of our independent politics coverage plus some extra features for your Sunday morning reading. What the left is doodling. What the right is doodling. Suspension of the Rules Isaac, Ari, and Kmele discuss the Indiana primaries and the relative morality of

Donald Trump

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I'm responding to criticisms of my Trump corruption piece.

Addressing your feedback on our recent Friday edition.
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Daily From the Newsletter

(from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom
Kevin Warsh at a Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing | REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque, edited by Russell Nystrom
A passenger on the cruise ship MV Hondius in Tenerife, Spain | REUTERS/Hannah McKay, edited by Russell Nystrom
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The Tangle team around a campfire during a team retreat in Vermont. Photo: Ari Weitzman
The Virginia State House in Richmond, Virginia | Photo by Farragutful, Wikimedia Commons, edited by Russell Nystrom

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This is the Tangle Sunday Edition, a brief roundup of our independent politics coverage plus some extra features including reader additions for your Sunday morning reading.

Hanna Rönnberg Mother and Child, image from Picryl | edietd by Candida Hall
President Donald Trump welcomes Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud to the White House — November 18, 2025 | Anna Rose Layden/POOL, edited by Russell Nystrom
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Here’s my message to America’s college students.

By Isaac Saul May 15, 2026
View in browser (from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom

Over the last five weeks, I’ve been criss-crossing the country, hitting college campuses to talk about Tangle, political polarization, and the state of the media. 

I’ve spoken at Rowan University in New Jersey, Davidson College in North Carolina, Brigham Young University in Utah, Harvard University in Massachusetts, and St. Olaf College in Minnesota. Five very different campuses with very different student bodies in very different parts of the country.

There’s so much to say about each of these places and these visits, but the top-line takeaway is what I said last month: The kids are alright — smart, kind, thoughtful, inquisitive, skeptical, and desperate to find reliable sources of information. On every campus, the concept of Tangle was welcome; the most pushback I faced was probably at Harvard, speaking to a group of Nieman Fellows who weren’t really students but mid-career journalists, many of whom seemed more skeptical about the idea Tangle could bridge a trust gap in America.

On the whole, though, it’s been an uplifting and fulfilling few weeks. And as I’ve traveled the country, I’ve been thinking even more deeply about our state of affairs, the real factors driving our divisions, and where we go from here. These thoughts culminated in the last talk I gave on the last stop on my de facto campus tour at St. Olaf, outside Minneapolis. I wrote the talk the morning of May 2, at a coffee shop around the corner from campus, and then delivered it that afternoon.

Today, I’m sharing that talk — which I’ve amended, edited, and rewritten in parts — as our members-only Friday edition. I hope you enjoy.

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