Bloggers Against Torture
Negar Azimi : In Egypt, bloggers have cracked into a tightly sealed state monopoly on information dissemination.
Herbert Mitgang on Bush's legacy, Stephen Gillers on censorship, Alexander Cockburn on whether Congress can stop the war.
Negar Azimi : In Egypt, bloggers have cracked into a tightly sealed state monopoly on information dissemination.
Christopher Hayes : David Axelrod, Barack Obama's closest political adviser, is applying the lessons he learned from Chicago's ugly racialized politics.
Stephen Gillers
:
The time has come to clear the records of two women convicted of obscenity for publishing excerpts from Joyce's Ulysses.
: Jim Webb's blunt talk on populist economics challenges Democrats to craft a 2008 strategy that allows all Americans to share the wealth.
Liza Featherstone : Thanks to the efforts of the peace movement and a significant shift in public opinion, we can stop this war. But it's not going to be easy.
David Bacon
:
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is using immigration control measures to retaliate against undocumented workers who stand up for their rights.
Herbert Mitgang
:
More proof that Bush has been the most dangerous President in American history.
Stefan Collini
:
William Empson's writing shaped modern criticism. A new biography restores him to his proper eminence.
William Deresiewicz : In a book-length essay on the novel, Milan Kundera foresees the curtain of literary history drawing to a close.
John Palattella : Rhetorical acts of defiance define the work of three contemporary Palestinian poets.
Calvin Trillin
:
Is there a screw loose somewhere?
Alexander Cockburn
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The people don't like the war, but it will go on as long as there is money to fund it.
Katrina vanden Heuvel : It's time for Congress to stop talking and start moving on Iraq.
Robert Scheer : Bush's military budget has less to do with running the country than with rewarding his pals and paying off his political debts.
Nicholas von Hoffman : China is losing its taste for lending the United States money that finances our wars, props up our dollar and shores up our credit.
Andrew Lam : In the world's increasingly crowded cities, personal space is shrinking--and so are options for personal happiness.
Does accurately covering a protest mean putting yourself at risk of police harassment? Some young journalists say it does.
Peter Dreier : Low-wage workers in hotels near Los Angeles International Airport are the latest to benefit from the city's living-wage law, riding a wave of considerable political momentum.
Arming women in the battle against HIV/AIDS.
A bill in Maine would disenfranchise college students.
Why and how you should work with them.
Friends of The Nation pay tribute to warmest-hearted populist ever to pick up a pen, who wrote with passion, humor and unbridled joy.
Cover by Gene Case & Stephen Kling/Avenging Angels