Print Magazine November 23-30, 2015 Issue Purchase Current Issue or Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial Comix Nation … Read More Matt Bors The GOP Has a Much Bigger Problem Than the Debates It's not just the leading candidates who are extremists. Joan Walsh Asking for a Friend: Is It Me or Is It Capitalism? In the first installment of our new advice column, Liza answers readers’ questions about depression and the ethics of cleaning apps. Liza Featherstone A Short History of Cops Terrorizing Students The assault at Spring Valley runs deeper than one bad cop—it’s the latest product of the school-to-prison pipeline. Alex S. Vitale Column Feminism Needs More Thinkers Who Aren’t Right 100 Percent of the Time Feminists like Germaine Greer should be valued for what they get right, rather than banned for what they get wrong. Katha Pollitt Rubio Cuts Down His Mentor Calvin Trillin Letters Letters From the November 23/30 Issue Bombs without borders… burying inequality… objectively unreasonable… a real bad apple… et tu, MSNBC?… Our Readers Feature This Time in Nevada, Hillary’s All In In 2008, Clinton took the state and its powerful unions for granted. She’s not making that mistake again. D.D. Guttenplan Why Grassroots Democrats Don’t Have a Problem With Democratic Socialism They know that Bernie Sanders is advocating an old American tradition—in fact, Democrats now favor socialism over capitalism by 12 percentage points. John Nichols The Paris Climate Conference: Last Chance for Planet Earth? The stakes are higher than they’ve ever been—but the movement may be on the verge of a breakthrough in public consciousness. Mark Hertsgaard Books & the Arts Politics, Principle, and Risk For political theorist Philip Green, taking sides has always meant taking action. Sara Rathod She’s Leaving Home In Crimson Peak and Brooklyn, women have to find the world in order to find their place in it. Stuart Klawans Not the Word, but the Thing Itself With each successive work, Clarice Lispector polished her prose until it shimmered with a taut irregularity. Ava Kofman The Beauty and the Costs of Extreme Altruism What if you were so troubled by suffering and inequality that you changed your life entirely? Samuel Moyn Recent Issues See All "swipe left below to view more recent issues"Swipe → December 2024 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 See All x
The GOP Has a Much Bigger Problem Than the Debates It's not just the leading candidates who are extremists. Joan Walsh
Asking for a Friend: Is It Me or Is It Capitalism? In the first installment of our new advice column, Liza answers readers’ questions about depression and the ethics of cleaning apps. Liza Featherstone
A Short History of Cops Terrorizing Students The assault at Spring Valley runs deeper than one bad cop—it’s the latest product of the school-to-prison pipeline. Alex S. Vitale
Feminism Needs More Thinkers Who Aren’t Right 100 Percent of the Time Feminists like Germaine Greer should be valued for what they get right, rather than banned for what they get wrong. Katha Pollitt
Letters From the November 23/30 Issue Bombs without borders… burying inequality… objectively unreasonable… a real bad apple… et tu, MSNBC?… Our Readers
This Time in Nevada, Hillary’s All In In 2008, Clinton took the state and its powerful unions for granted. She’s not making that mistake again. D.D. Guttenplan
Why Grassroots Democrats Don’t Have a Problem With Democratic Socialism They know that Bernie Sanders is advocating an old American tradition—in fact, Democrats now favor socialism over capitalism by 12 percentage points. John Nichols
The Paris Climate Conference: Last Chance for Planet Earth? The stakes are higher than they’ve ever been—but the movement may be on the verge of a breakthrough in public consciousness. Mark Hertsgaard
Politics, Principle, and Risk For political theorist Philip Green, taking sides has always meant taking action. Sara Rathod
She’s Leaving Home In Crimson Peak and Brooklyn, women have to find the world in order to find their place in it. Stuart Klawans
Not the Word, but the Thing Itself With each successive work, Clarice Lispector polished her prose until it shimmered with a taut irregularity. Ava Kofman
The Beauty and the Costs of Extreme Altruism What if you were so troubled by suffering and inequality that you changed your life entirely? Samuel Moyn