Articles

Bush’s Napoleonic Folly Bush’s Napoleonic Folly

Bush's war on Iraq mirrors Napoleon's invasion of Egypt--two disastrous attempts to reshape the Middle East.

Aug 24, 2007 / Feature / Juan Cole

Education Among the Devastation Education Among the Devastation

Post-Katrina student life is a balance of stress, studies and hope for the future.

Aug 24, 2007 / The Nation

Future Civil Rights: Next Move Is Ours Future Civil Rights: Next Move Is Ours

We don't need to look for another Malcolm X or Martin Luther King Jr. to change our communities. We need to believe in ourselves.

Aug 24, 2007 / The Nation

What Are Political Action Committees? What Are Political Action Committees?

Political gold diggers abound throughout Washington, DC, and US state capitals. But what are PACs, what do they want and how do they affect us?

Aug 24, 2007 / The Nation

Warner Buys Bush Time Warner Buys Bush Time

Senator John Warner's call yesterday for an "orderly and carefully planned withdrawal" from Iraq is being read in Washington as yet another devastating blow to President ...

Aug 24, 2007 / Ari Berman

Stop Fox’s Fear-Mongering Stop Fox’s Fear-Mongering

With Iraq reaching previously unimaginable levels of violence, with the US military stretched to the breaking point and with America's international reputation in tatters, it's re...

Aug 23, 2007 / Peter Rothberg

Silent Witness Silent Witness

A batch of new books on Hurricane Katrina investigate who is to blame for the tragedy.

Aug 23, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Ari Kelman

Bywater Blues Bywater Blues

Reviews of Kamp Katrina, The Monastery and Exiled.

Aug 23, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

My Bondage, My Freedom My Bondage, My Freedom

Robert Walser's writing--opaque and ethereal, provoking and digressive--is finally being introduced to American readers.

Aug 23, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Christine Smallwood

An Inconvenient Truth An Inconvenient Truth

In 1988 US officials helped disguise Saddam's chemical attack on Halabja. But when it came time to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq, they acted outraged.

Aug 23, 2007 / Books & the Arts / Andrew Cockburn

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