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Greg Mitchell | The Nation

Greg Mitchell

Author Bios

Greg Mitchell

Greg Mitchell

Greg Mitchell writes a daily blog for The Nation focusing on media, politics and culture. He is the former editor of Editor & Publisher and author of thirteen books. His latest book, on the 2012 Obama-Romney race, is Tricks, Lies, and Videotape. His other books include Atomic Cover-Up, The Campaign of the Century (winner of the Goldsmith Book Prize), two books related to WikiLeaks and a pair of books with Robert Jay Lifton on Hiroshima and the death penalty in America. His Twitter feed is @GregMitch and he can be reached at:  epic1934@aol.com.   His personal blog is Pressing Issues.

Articles

News and Features

The New York Times’s new ombudsperson keeps the Gray Lady honest.

His 1934 California gubernatorial run created one of the most important mass movements ever,  helped push the New Deal to the left -- and inspired the birth of the modern political campaign.

Now that WikiLeaks is collaborating with media organizations across the globe, a huge trove of previously-unpublished State Department cables are coming to light.

Saudis are funding international terrorism, the State Department ordered spying on UN officials, Obama helped protect Bush officials who ordered torture... and more bombshells.

As the nuclear security summit convenes in Washington, the US's "first-use" of nuclear bombs in 1945 still matters.

When Bruce Springsteen became a political "Boss" he could not have imagined that the lyrics from one of his most famous songs would be cited by one American president and used to lampoon critics of another.

The seventh anniversary of the start of the Iraq war dawned today with very little notice in the media--but at the start of the war, many more newspapers opposed it than we now remember.

Our media watchdogs require close watching. It's been an article of faith for Nation editors and readers since the founding of the magazine. I'm excited to join this tradition, and take it to new terrain at Media Fix, The Nation's first blog devoted to highlighting the best and worst of current media.

Knowing what America owes its dead--be they soldiers lost in
Iraq or civilians lost in the Gulf Coast storm--could prod the nation toward a decisive rejection of the Bush Administration's war policies.

Blogs

The arrest of a Sovereign Citizens Movement sympathizer points to the rise of militia groups with access to weapons.
Of course the defense nominee wasn't receiving funds from the made-up “Friends of Hamas.” But such coverage plays to...
Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei complain about access to the president—but what did they really do with that access when they had it?
The creator of Incident in East Baghdad is completing a documentary on excesses of the surveillance state.
The leading critics of Obama’s defense secretary nomination were also leading proponents of the Iraq War, which Hagel opposed.
Newtown shooter Adam Lanza's mother has been painted as a victim, yet she was the one who bought an arsenal of guns, taught Adam to...
The MSNBC host promises new revelations—will she cover colleagues' support for the war?