Society

Far From Heaven Far From Heaven

During the early years of the civil rights revolution, Theodore Bilbo, the ferocious segregationist senator from Mississippi, published a book titled Take Your Choice: Separati...

May 29, 2003 / Books & the Arts / Michael Lind

White Lies White Lies

The radio went on in the middle of the night and there in my ear was the voice of a young man.

May 29, 2003 / Column / Katha Pollitt

Liberalizing the Law Liberalizing the Law

With the Bush Administration continuing to fill the federal courts with right-wing judges, liberals have turned with renewed vigor to a strategy that not only allows them to de...

May 29, 2003 / Editorial / Alexander Wohl

Mirror of the Times Mirror of the Times

With all the words laundered over the Jayson Blair affair, why is my soul still disquieted? Why do I feel even further from the truth than on the day the journalistic fraud was...

May 29, 2003 / Editorial / James W. Carey

Fight Club Fight Club

Writing may be fighting, as Ishmael Reed famously opined, but most writers know the difference. There are, of course, some who blur the line.

May 22, 2003 / Books & the Arts / Adam Shatz

Offering Hope–at a Price Offering Hope–at a Price

US drug firms make the choice clear: our outrageous profits or your life.

May 22, 2003 / Feature / Katharine Greider

Forgetting to Laugh Forgetting to Laugh

Of all the columns I've written, never have I gotten more mail than for the following sentence: "It will not matter that the Dixie Chicks play to full, cheering houses, while t...

May 22, 2003 / Column / Patricia J. Williams

Now, Gods, Stand Up for Fakers! Now, Gods, Stand Up for Fakers!

Thank God for fakers! Matchless as deflaters of human and institutional pretension, they furnish us rich measures of malicious glee at the red-faced victims.

May 22, 2003 / Beat the Devil / Alexander Cockburn

Guantánamo Gulag Guantánamo Gulag

Whatever happened to the "worst of the worst"?

May 22, 2003 / Editorial / David Cole

Saving Private Lynch: Take 2 Saving Private Lynch: Take 2

In the 1998 film Wag the Dog, political operatives employ special editing techniques to create phony footage that will engender public sympathy for a manufactured war.

May 21, 2003 / Column / Robert Scheer

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