Aubrey Gulick, Author at The American Spectator | USA News and Politics
Authors
Aubrey Gulick
Aubrey Gulick is a recent graduate from Hillsdale College and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute Fellow at The American Spectator. When she isn’t writing, Aubrey enjoys long runs, solving rock climbs, and rattling windows with the 32-foot pipes on the organ. Follow her on Twitter @AubGulick.
by and | Apr 18, 2024

While speaking at Boston’s Islamic Center, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) told listeners that she believes the International Court of Justice will find that Israel’s actions in Gaza legally constitute genocide. On today’s episode of The Spectator P.M. Podcast, hosts…

by | Apr 18, 2024

The Left doesn’t like the U.S. Supreme Court. It didn’t like that, after President Donald Trump left office, six of the nine justices were appointed by Republicans, and it liked it even less when those justices overturned Roe v. Wade,…

by and | Apr 17, 2024

President Joe Biden’s promise to sign a bill to force TikTok’s parent company to either sell the company or be banned from U.S. app stores has made quite a few of his young supporters — many of whom get their…

by | Apr 12, 2024

It seems that most people have started to tune out the latest developments in artificial intelligence. That’s probably because, while many of those developments feel as though they belong in the prologue of an epic sci-fi novel, computer scientists and…

by | Apr 11, 2024

Whether we like it or not, artificial intelligence is taking over the internet. Content creators use it to generate images, videos, and text, programmers use it to generate code, and writers use it to generate illustrations. But AI is trained…

by and | Apr 11, 2024

Recycling plastic is not easy, even if you’re funded by some of the big manufacturing companies and subsidized by the government. On today’s episode of The Spectator P.M. Podcast, hosts Ellie Gardey and Aubrey Gulick discuss a recent New York…

by | Apr 10, 2024

Let’s suppose, for a moment, that you are in charge of choosing the date for the Democratic National Convention — you know, the event where pledged delegates representing the states and superdelegates representing the establishment (a rather useless distinction, all things…

by and | Apr 10, 2024

Boeing’s aircraft have made headlines multiple times over the last few months — and not for the right reasons. On today’s episode of The Spectator P.M. Podcast, hosts Ellie Gardey and Aubrey Gulick discuss Christopher Rufo’s recent interview with a Boeing insider…

by | Apr 8, 2024

Rome was an empty and broken city in 1341. The popes had fled to France where the castles weren’t crumbling, and families weren’t holding grudges against them. Its population had dwindled to a mere 20,000 (the city had been built…

by | Apr 8, 2024

The Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland, California, is astonishing. From the outside, it appears as though a spaceship decided to land on the banks of Lake Merritt, while the interior reminds the visitor of an upside-down boat. Maple-stained…

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