John McCain, Demonstrating His Intention to Make Inroads Among African-American Voters...
Calvin Trillin
But guess who showed up instead?

Calvin Trillin
But guess who showed up instead?
Calvin Trillin
Just keep it coming.
Stephen Duncombe : Progressives, Liberals, & The American Left
Today's progressive message-makers can learn a lot from Franklin Roosevelt's homey "fireside chats."
Calvin Trillin
Saying goodbye to the Republicans' funniest candidate.
Calvin Trillin
The lure of filthy lucre on the campaign trail.
Patricia J. Williams : Presidential Election 2008
Now that we've crested the mountaintop, let's have some politically incorrect dreams.
Calvin Trillin
A hidden weapon in our fight against recession.
Calvin Trillin
O Captain, not my Captain.
Marvin Kitman : Presidential Election 2008
Political opinionators have a lot of explaining to do about their poor prognostication in New Hampshire.
Annabelle Gurwitch
If Hillary wants Americans to like her, she should start doing the things Americans like.
Calvin Trillin
Whatever happened to what's-his-name?
My top-ten list of reasons why I gave God the old heave-ho.
All fired up and nowhere to go.
Great hair and lots of money can't get you everything.
Peter C. Baker : Presidential Election 2008
Norman Podhoretz and Daniel Pipes consider how the newly elected President should proceed in the world arena. The first act of a five-act play.
The GOP front-runner's dubious miracle cure.
Huckabee wins the prize for "Mr. Congeniality" hands down...whatever else you might say about him.
The GOP learns a thing or two about what it means to be gay.
His campaign slogan--"As I Was Saying, You Have My Undivided Attention"--is playing well with voters in areas where cell phone coverage is erratic.
The raunchy, racy comedian makes us laugh and cringe.
Women are less happy than we used to be. But given the state of the world, perhaps if we had a little more worry and a little less happy, we'd be better off.
Annabelle Gurwitch : Electoral Politics
Politics aside, a speeded-up primary season may be a unique opportunity to rethink our notions of time altogether.
Barbara Ehrenreich : Increased Security After 9/11
Now that we know there's a vice squad deployed to find people looking to hook up for quickies in airport bathrooms, air travel has taken on a whole new dimension.
The Corn Belt looks askance at a highly disagreeable field of GOP contenders.
Annabelle Gurwitch : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
The Nation Cruise drops its final anchor and its highly politicized passengers head for home.
Barbara Ehrenreich : George W. Bush
Describing the recent bridge failure and steam-pipe explosion as "cowardly attacks on our way of life," Bush today opened a new front in his permanent war on everything.
The word "spoiler" doesn't even begin to describe it.
The White House announced that the President has run out of his own bad ideas and is looking elsewhere for new ones, even if they don't make any sense.
How good a pup will Gordon Brown be?
The President's offshore approval ratings get a boost.
Simon Maxwell Apter : Television
Over eighteen seasons and three presidential eras, The Simpsons has paid badly animated homage to all that sucks in America.
The Big Bang is something else entirely.
Help for the troops might come from an unlikely source.
Candidates are eager to "keep all options on the table," but where's the table?
Katrina vanden Heuvel & Stephen Colbert : Television
Katrina vanden Heuvel appears on The Colbert Report to debate the host on the question of truthiness and much more.
Polling experts say that Bush's numbers are at an all-time low, and that only certain toxic molds have come close to those numbers in the past.
What a long, strange trip it's going to be.
The ultimate test of patriotism.
Is there a screw loose somewhere?
Calvin Trillin : George W. Bush
It's not the surge we're worried about. It's the soldiers.
Can you say "Decider"?
And each one has to do with getting the hell out.
Goodness, gracious! He was right all along.
Now here's a guy who knows whereof he speaks.
Evan Eisenberg : Republican Party
Republicans in Congress have set aside $20 million for a gala in Washington to celebrate victory in Iraq and Afghanistan. The party may be postponed for a while, but the program has been drafted--and we've got a copy.
Pentagon briefings won't be the same.
At least one person in the GOP might feel relieved.
Hint: It starts with the M-word.
What passes now for West Wing policy is whatever will cover their
collective derrieres.
President Bush said Monday that members of the opposition party are the only ones who can make the November operation a success.
From 'Nam to Lebanon, the Gulf War and, um, Texas.
What makes you think he knows anything?
Bush and his boys will be singing this little ditty all the way to the
voting booth.
Rosecrans Baldwin : George W. Bush
"Some expert on CNN said, 'A stitch in time saves nine.' And I thought, Doesn't anyone speak clearly anymore? Nine what?"
Yes, there is indeed a link between Iraq and Bush's "war on terror."
Calvin Trillin : George W. Bush
The Decider takes on that bothersome Constitution and that meddling
Congress.
Don't worry--it only feels like you're drowning.
The President gives us a lesson in drive-by personal diplomacy.
Here's how Democrats should spin the biggest political question in the
midterm elections.
Calvin Trillin : George W. Bush
Everyone knows what his predecessors liked for dinner. But there's one special dish we'd really like to serve George W. Bush.
Joseph Minton Amann & Tom Breuer : Non-Fiction
Looking for a blast of hot air? Two intrepid literary critics venture deep into the steaming, muddy jungles of the Fox News pundit's award-losing prose.
Condi takes her "birth pangs" mantra on the road.
Stephen Gillers : George W. Bush
In a news brief from the future, Bush continues to do whatever it takes to protect us from terror.
Calvin Trillin : Media Analysis
The papers simply cannot find the space.
There's not a lot anyone needs to know.
Right-wing nutcase Bernard Goldberg may think he has a lock on who's messing up the Republic, but consider Dan Brown, Joe Franklin, Tucker Carlson...
Celebrating the death of Zarqawi, the President puts his spin on the
truth.
Another winning strategy for Team Bush and its war on terror.
In his new short story collection In Persuasion Nation, absurdist extraordinaire George Saunders offers a surreal depiction of the destruction of individuality through consumer mega-culture.
A vote to ban gay marriage always works like a charm.
As hurricane season began in earnest, Ray Nagin, who famously declared New Orleans a "chocolate city," began his second term as mayor. What better time to appreciate the way George Clinton, America's should-be poet laureate, has funked up politics?
The Colorado Rockies recruit Christian players and claim God is at work on their game. Major League Baseball woos evangelicals with special "Faith Days at the Park." Something's going on here, but it has nothing to do with God.
A contrite Commander in Chief will watch his words from here on.
Barbara Garson : Health Care Policy
Desperate for medical care, an ailing granny pies the President and
finds a soft bed in a country club prison. It's enough to make you go
out and commit a crime.
Former Heisman trophy winner and ganja-smoking peacenik Ricky Williams is contemplating the sweet life in the Canadian Football League. Here's hoping he finds it.
Richard Lingeman : Books, Literature, & Ideas
In Literary Lives, caricaturist Edward Sorel tells all and then some about giants like Yeats, Proust, Hellman and Jung within the humble frame of a comic strip.
What it takes to make him change his mind.
Why should anyone be surprised that Dick Cheney's good oil boys are
making out like bandits?
Richard Lingeman : US Politics & Government
A political nightmare, with a scriptural spin, tells the true story of two nefarious lords and their faithful servant.
Goodbye to a Bush official who has been remarkably consistent.
Calvin Trillin : Donald Rumsfeld
The Pentagon chief has been too wrong for too long.
A musical answer to a bellicose question, with apologies to Yip Harburg
and Burton Lane.
Richard Lingeman : George W. Bush Administration
A political nightmare, with a scriptural spin, tells the true story of two nefarious lords and their faithful servant.
It can now be revealed that Justice Antonin Scalia has compiled his own secret list of Sicilian hand gestures expressing subtle jurisprudential points.
Nicholas von Hoffman : Religion
Time-honored traditions of Christianity are being challenged by scientists and scholars questioning the motives of Jesus, Judas and the power of prayer.


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