Politics

Moe Foner, 1916-2002 Moe Foner, 1916-2002

Moe Foner, labor activist and member of a well-known left-wing family, who died January 10 at the age of 86, will be remembered with fondness and respect by Nation readers. From a...

Jan 17, 2002 / The Editors

Enron: Crony Capitalism Enron: Crony Capitalism

The rise and fall of the house of Enron should trigger comprehensive investigations--civil, criminal and Congressional. The full scope of relations between Enron and its cronies ...

Jan 17, 2002 / The Editors

For Her Own Good For Her Own Good

With the "family cap," the state says to welfare moms: no more babies!

Jan 17, 2002 / Feature / Karen Houppert

In Our Orbit In Our Orbit

"Court rise!" begins D.D. Guttenplan's courtroom thriller The Holocaust on Trial. "With the clerk's shout we stop talking and struggle to our feet. David Irving v. Penguin Books ...

Jan 17, 2002 / Books & the Arts / The Editors

$hotgun Weddings $hotgun Weddings

What would the government have to do to convince you to get married when you otherwise wouldn't? More than pay you $80 a month, I'll bet, the amount Wisconsin's much-ballyhooed "...

Jan 17, 2002 / Column / Katha Pollitt

Vienna: Waltz or Go-Go? Vienna: Waltz or Go-Go?

Exile is the best school of dialectics.          --Bertolt Brecht Peter Gay emigrated from Germany when he was a teenager and work...

Jan 17, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Paul Reitter

All Together Now… All Together Now…

It was not without warning that Congress voted to end welfare-as-we-knew-it in 1996, but still, it seemed to catch the progressive community off-guard.

Jan 17, 2002 / The Editors

Enron Conservatives Enron Conservatives

Concerned about potential taint from the metastasizing Enron scandal, George W. Bush met with reporters recently to distance himself from Enron's chairman, Ken Lay (nicknamed "Ke...

Jan 17, 2002 / Robert L. Borosage

Bush to Lay: What Was Your Name Again? Bush to Lay: What Was Your Name Again?

If you believe President Bush, Kenneth Lay--one of his top financial backers and his "good friend"--was merely an equal-opportunity corrupter of our political system, buying off ...

Jan 15, 2002 / Column / Robert Scheer

Judging the Wise Guys Judging the Wise Guys

It's that time of the decade again; time to ask the time-honored question, "Whither the Public Intellectual?" We did it in the 1980s when Russell Jacoby first published his still...

Jan 10, 2002 / Column / Eric Alterman

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