Progressives in the Obama Moment
Robert L. Borosage & Katrina vanden Heuvel : Here's how progressives can ensure Obama's success.
Chris Bowers on the end of backlash politics, David Cole on the Hamdan verdict, Stuart Klawans on cinema.
Robert L. Borosage & Katrina vanden Heuvel : Here's how progressives can ensure Obama's success.
Chris Bowers
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No matter who wins in November, demographic trends indicate that the era of backlash politics is over.
Christopher Hayes : Obama's voter-registration drive could be the change America's been waiting for.
Five community organizers from across the country assess the impact of Obama's history as an organizer.
Our Readers
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Readers write back on the subprime crisis, affordable housing, E.L. Doctorow and more.
: The tepid platform Democrats will adopt in Denver isn't a new social contract, but it does go places Republicans never will. Let's hope Obama does better.
Katrina vanden Heuvel : It's time for the US to dissolve its cold war military alliances and develop realistic new policies toward Russia.
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The I-word, back on the table; Fannie Lou Hamer and the Democrats.
Melissa Harris-Lacewell : His convention speech should draw from the wisdom of black women activists who were the prophets of American democracy.
David Cole
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Salim Hamdam's conviction and short sentence does nothing to repair the damage the Bush Administration has done.
Thomas J. Sugrue : Historian Rick Perlstein explores the resentment and polarization sparked by the Nixon era's cultural and political strife.
Andrew Rice : Two new books explore the states of wonder and mortification evoked by baseball.
Stuart Klawans
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Hurricane Katrina seen from an eye in the storm.
Patricia J. Williams : Critiques of Obama's suitability for the presidency are bookended by astonishingly contradictory stereotypes.
Eric Alterman : Dana Milbank's coverage of Obama in the Washington Post has become a symbol of a press corps that is almost as the Bush Administration.
VideoNation & Brett Story : The Nation's Chris Hayes catches up with a pro-gun gathering of Democrats in Denver--and Davy Crockett's 21st-century namesake.
The Daily Show : John Stewart checks in with his crack team of reporters for the latest developments at the DNC.
Center For Emerging Media : Nation writers Bob Moser and Roberto Lovato discuss how Democrats can best pursue economic reform and a better immigration policy.
Victor Navasky : Outside the arena, progressives are saying this is a moment of transformational politics. Is the party leadership listening?
Patricia J. Williams : Hillary's signature attire is one phase in women's power-dressing; Michelle's sheath is another. But the shoes....
VideoNation & Brett Story : The Nation's Publisher Emeritus reflects on every convention since 1956--and ahead to Obama's historic moment.
Robert Scheer : He lacks the chops to deal with our economic crisis, so McCain's best strategy is to run as the President who'll fight the next cold war. Scary thing: he might win.
How the presidential candidates plan to change the face of volunteering in America.
Eric Alterman : The national news narrative from Denver is completely nuts: consider the unsourced myth of the Clinton-Obama feud.
Steve Cobble : Barack Obama stands on the shoulders of many as he becomes the Democratic presidential nominee. One set of those shoulders belongs to Jesse Jackson.
Nicholas von Hoffman : Our paychecks are disintegrating as we drive them to the bank. Forget hope and change: why aren't the candidates talking about inflation?
Center For Emerging Media : Rep. Jim McDermott and Nation editorial board member Tom Hayden discuss how the US can end the Iraq war quickly and responsibly.
Victor Navasky : Undecided voters don't care about left or right: they simply want a candidate they can trust. As he shifts to the center, Obama risks losing his greatest asset--authenticity.
Sinan Antoon : A tribute to the premier Arab poet of the past half-century.
VideoNation & Brett Story : If Barack Obama is promishing change from the bottom up, then what's driving the protests in Denver?
Eric Alterman : If there were any real news here, 15,000 journalists would be reporting it. Instead, they gather soundbites from a few nut cases who consider politics a form of therapy.
The UpTake : Laura Flanders leads a panel discussion featuring Van Jones and David Barsamian on the subject of change.
Elizabeth Giegerich : Three years after Hurricane Katrina, Tulane University thrives, due in part to its revamped commitment to community.
Center For Emerging Media : Rep. John Conyers and Rep. Barbara Lee discuss what a progressive policy on world hunger and the spread of HIV would look like.
The Nation hosts thought-provoking discussions and events in Denver during the DNC.
Radio Nation : The Nation's reporter in Georgia talks about being assaulted by Ossetian paramilitaries. Plus: A DNC preview.
Gary Phillips : This Week: Things get all twisty as Kang makes some moves her own damn self, and her slacker brother contemplates the Big Wave.
Aziz Huq : Attorney General Michael Mukasey is poised to implement new rules that will create a new surveillance state.
Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom : He'd feel bad that the whole Communist era was airbrushed out of the Olympic spectacle. But he'd probably like the swimming.
VideoNation : The Nation's Ari Berman dissects the corporate influence-peddling at this year's Democratic convention.
Tom Hayden : McCain and the neocons are heating up a conflict in the Caucasus; it's up to the peace movement to keep Obama from signing on.
Grit TV : Activist Judith Browne-Dianis explains why progressives should care about public housing.
Max Blumenthal : How a racist, conspiratorial crank became the Republican attack machine's anti-Obama point man.
Robert Scheer : His irrational mix of patriotic swagger and blindness to reality is proving disturbingly successful with millions of uninformed voters.
Michael Gould-Wartofsky : Thousands of young activists are poised to protest at the Democratic and Republican conventions. In the age of Obama, is street protest still relevant?
Nicholas von Hoffman : Some 200,000 college students won't qualify for loans in September, and millions more will pay higher interest rates. Can they count on Obama to help them out?
VideoNation : The Nation's Ari Melber explains why the Democratic National Convention will be a game-changer.
Barbara Crossette : Pervez Musharraf is history, but his opponents seem unable to agree on what to do next. After so many disappointments, can Pakistan rise to the occasion?
Gary Phillips : This Week: Congresswoman Kang hangs out in the loo, wide stance and all.
Brave New Films : Exactly how many luxury homes do John and Cindy McCain own?
Barbara Crossette : The resignation of Pervez Musharraf and a looming election in India offer hope that with the right leadership, the sixty-year faceoff over Kashmir might finally be resolved.
Radio Nation : China's middle class ambitions; the Democrats' quest for blue-collar votes.
Tom Engelhardt : And one answer: Bush's global 'war on terror' operates on a double standard.
Adele Oltman : As Obama accepts his party's presidential nomination on the forty-fifth anniversary of King's most famous speech, a historian looks beyond the obvious analogies.
YouTube : The Nation's Ari Melber sheds light on the real contenders for Obama's Vice President.
Margarita Akhvlediani : Once geopolitical lines are redrawn, the question must be answered: who started this war?
Humanitainment : McCain keeps trying to knock him down, but Obama is prepared to overcome with his good character and reach victory.
John Nichols : Democrats have come a long way from the first Denver convention a century ago.
Mark Weisbrot : Evo Morales expanded his mandate with a landslide victory in a referendum last week. But the Washington foreign policy establishment still won't acknowledge he's delivering on his promises.
Tom Hayden : If millions are to be spent on an anti-Iraq, anti-McCain message, the money will come from the Obama campaign or not at all.
Brave New Films : Here's how to keep FOX smears of Obama from spreading.
American News Project : Wal-Mart is telling its employees to vote Republican. Isn't that illegal?
The Daily Show : Few expected the Beijing Olympics to go without its fair share of scandals--but who knew they would mostly turn out to be so laughable?
Nicholas von Hoffman : Americans know all the details of the John Edwards affair. But they remain in the dark about a scandal that affects the livelihoods of millions. Who orchestrated the fall of Bear Stearns?
Students from around the world gather in China's march to protect the environment. Learn how youth are looking beyond Olympic feuds to forge a sustainable future.
Forward Montana's Matt Singer discusses how to reach new voters with bunny ears and costumes.
Frank W. Lewis : From the January 17, 1948, issue.
Frank W. Lewis : From the January 17, 1948, issue.
Christine Smallwood : The Canadian filmmaker discusses his new film, My Winnipeg, and the importance of cultivating a personal mythology.
Cover design by Gene Case & Stephen Kling/Avenging Angels from the poster by Shepard Fairey