March 14, 2005
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Feature
On the Money
Massive resources are at stake in the debate roiling the AFL-CIO’s Las Vegas summit.
David Moberg
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Peace Activists in the War Room
A report from the antiwar movement’s St. Louis summit.
Karen Houppert
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When Liberals Collide
The Los Angeles mayoral race raises difficult questions for progressives.
Marc Cooper
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Galbraith: An Appreciation
John Kenneth Galbraith was famous long ago as America’s most widely read economist, until his expansive understanding of economic liberalism was pushed aside by political events and conservativ
William Greider
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Editorial
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Dirty Politics, Foul Air
At Pittsburgh’s Jefferson Elementary School, which overlooks the dark gray plumes from two electric power plants, there are so many children with asthma the school nurse alphabetizes the inhalers
Rebecca Clarren
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Gorbachev’s Lost Legacy
The most important event of the late twentieth century began twenty years ago this month.
Stephen F. Cohen
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Negroponte: Unfit to Lead
“You have to ask, Who would want this job?” So said a former senior CIA official referring to the new post of director of national intelligence, to which George W.
David Corn
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Sex & GOP ‘Values’
Mourning the loss of “moral values” voters, Democratic leaders have been softening the party’s language on reproductive rights.
The Editors
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Column
The Force Bush Won’t Use on Iran
Bush’s policies have left the leaders of Iran defending a more logical position than that of our own government.
Robert Scheer
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The Pajama Game
It’s hard to know who to root against in the bloggers vs. CNN controversy that led to the resignation of CNN’s Eason Jordan, a twenty-three-year veteran of the network.
Eric Alterman
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Playing by the Numbers
My friend L., a magistrate in Britain, is appalled by American-style sentencing, which has taken hold there recently.
Patricia J. Williams
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Ambassador John Negroponte’s Intelligence on the Subject of Torture and Murder Squads
The man who’s just been put in charge
Of knowing all will now assure us
That he knew nothing–nada, zip–
When he was stationed in Honduras.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
The Impermanent Revolution
Isaac Deutscher stands out among the early intellectual mentors of the New Left as the only one who expounded classical Marxism. On a mid-1960s “must read” authors list that included C.
Ronald Aronson
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Jewtopia
Yiddish, a national language that never had a nation-state, may no longer have millions of speakers, but it remains contested territory nonetheless.
J. Hoberman
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Stankonia
Fifty years ago, a young Polish journalist named Leopold Tyrmand lost his job at the country’s last surviving independent publication, the Catholic weekly Tygodnik Powszechny, which was
Brian Morton
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Letters
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