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DecHighlightIssue_DrewShannon
DecHighlightIssue_DrewShannon

Welcome to the December issue of The Highlight

We’re ending 2024 with more questions than answers. There are the timely ones: Can men and women really be friends when the gender divide has become so stark and contentious? And does the term “Latino” make sense in politics anymore? There are some more existential ones, too, like who has the right to die? Can tourism actually save a planet in crisis?

This month we’re also making the case against optimization, taking a look at how AI impacts vulnerable Americans, and uncovering the hidden antibiotic trade-off for kids. Plus, there’s interpersonal relationship advice, book recommendations just for members, and a Highlight podcast on inventing a future to fight for.


Latinos con Harris Walz
Corbis via Getty Images

The uncomfortable question about “Latino” voters

Is the group too diverse to think of with just one word?

By Christian Paz


An illustration of an exasperated young woman looking at her phone. A giant phone behind her is filled with angry, yelling men. On the other side of the giant phone is a young man unaware of her experience.
Drew Shannon for Vox

Can friendship survive the gender war?

Yes, men and women can (and probably should) be friends, even when relations are fraught.

By Allie Volpe


The cover of the book Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune 2052-2072.
Paige Vickers/Vox; book cover courtesy of Common Notions

A hopeful post-apocalyptic novel for right now

Author Eman Abdelhadi on imagining a better world.

By Jorge Just


An illustration of a man sitting on a giant neon pink flower. Behind him is a dark background covered in math equations and an upward trend line.
Hoi Chan for Vox

The perils of trying to optimize your morality

I tried to make the perfect choice every time. It eroded my humanity.

By Sigal Samuel


Book covers for In the Dream House, War and Peace, Les Misérables, Ninth House, The Queen of the Night, Swordspoint, and Emma.
Paige Vickers for Vox

“I want a book that will give me hope that things will get better.”

Books to get you through the next four years.

By Constance Grady


Why thousands of people are traveling to one country to see these birds

An unexpected industry is booming in Colombia. Here’s why that’s a good thing.

By Benji Jones


Major change doesn’t have to wreck your friendships

Everyone evolves. Your friendships can too.

By Angel Martinez


The high-tech future of assisted suicide is here. The world isn’t ready.

A “suicide pod” in Switzerland roils the right-to-die debate.

By Marin Cogan


Giving healthy kids antibiotics saves lives. There’s a catch.

An intervention to reduce child mortality may accelerate drug resistance.

By Jessica Craig


LA thinks AI could help decide which homeless people get scarce housing — and which don’t

Without enough houses for its growing homeless population, the city is using machine learning to make its process fairer.

By Carly Stern


Wait, should I bother using antibacterial soap?

It turns out cleaning your hands is more complicated than killing germs.

By Keren Landman

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