Excerpts

Curated stories from around the web.
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A teacher points to an ovary on a diagram of reproductive organs projected in a classroom.

“Filmitis”

When movie fandom became a medical condition.
John F. Kennedy

Why Is the Establishment Ignoring the Recently Declassified JFK Files?

The documents show how CIA spymaster James Angleton hid Oswald’s movements, hid a secret Israeli liaison, and lied to Congress for decades.
Outline of a police face with a bunch of faces within the image.

How Police Harassed and Infiltrated Civil Rights Groups

Efforts to surveil and undermine activists went far beyond infamous operations such as Cointelpro.
Augusto Pinochet in Chile on May 1, 1987

Operation Condor: A Network of Transnational Repression 50 Years Later

How Condor launched a wave of cross-border assassinations and disappearances in Latin America.
Firefighters in the rubble of the World Trade Center.

Honest Truths From Wrongful Deaths

Left-wing intellectuals' early responses to the 9/11 terror attacks.
A Catholic church.

Crabgrass Catholicism

A discussion with Father Stephen M. Koeth about religion and suburbanization.
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and Jimmy Carter

The US Propped Up the Shah’s Dictatorship to the Bitter End

The shah of Iran faced a secular opposition that wanted to restore constitutional government.
"Napalm Girl" or "Terror of War" photograph credited to Nick Ut shows Kim Phuc and Vietnamese children running after their village was bombed with napalm in the Vietnam War.

Inside the Battle Over 'Napalm Girl'

What we have long accepted about one of the most galvanizing war photographs of all time may not be true. Can history be rewritten?
Map of Texas's congressional districts.

How Redistricting Turned a Setback Into a Bloodbath

The 1894 election cycle holds some key lessons for partisan gerrymanders today.
Students flee gunfire on the campus of Kent State

Shades of Kent State

From Nixon to Trump.
Michael Shannon as James Garfield in Death by Lightning.

The Real Story Behind ‘Death by Lightning’ and the Assassination of President James A. Garfield

The series dramatizes the brief tenure of the 20th president, who was fatally shot by Charles Guiteau, a lawyer who believed he’d secured Garfield’s election.
Michael Shannon as President James Garfield.

“Death by Lightning” Dramatizes the Assassination America Forgot

The new Netflix miniseries makes the 1881 killing of President James Garfield feel thrillingly current.
The Boston Massacre, printed by Paul Revere Jr., 1770.
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Deploying Federal Troops to U.S. Cities Is a Second Amendment Issue

But not because the founders wanted to see more guns in the hands of Americans.

The Man Incapable of Writing a Bad Sentence

Friends, enemies and lovers animate more than 60 years of the John Updike’s remarkable correspondence.
American colonists pulling down a statue of King George the Third.

The Incoherence of Ken Burns’s ‘The American Revolution’

Ken Burns has set himself the impossible task of retelling a national origin story that all Americans will embrace as their own.

Surrealism Against Fascism

A century ago, artists who survived the trenches captured humanity’s capacity for destruction. What can they teach us in a new age of genocide?
American and French soldiers at the siege of Yorktown, by Jean-Baptiste-Antoine DeVerger, 1781.

Patriot Acts

What Ken Burns gets wrong about the war that made America.
Illustration of Rudolph Fisher sitting and typing.

Renaissance Man

Doctor, writer, musician, and orator: Rudolph Fisher was a scientist and an artist whose métier was Harlem.
Giovanni Schiaparelli’s map of Mars drawing.

The Man Who Wanted to Believe in Life on Mars

The Mars craze is a case study in twisting evidence and defying facts.
President John F. Kennedy with his brother Robert F. Kennedy

What RFK Jr. Didn’t Tell You About the False Flag Operation He Loves to Denounce

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. leaves out his father's role in pushing false flag plans for a war with Cuba.
U.S. Supreme Court

On the Sweeping Supreme Court Decision That Led to Widespread High School Censorship

A look at the long history of censorship in public school yearbooks.
Pictures of Martin Luther King Jr. with a red background, and with words talking about his assassination.

The Man Who Was Supposed to Kill Martin Luther King Jr.

For years, one man complicated the official story of who murdered the civil-rights leader. Just before he died in October, he offered a jaw-dropping revelation.
David Rubenstein looks toward the Washington Monument.

When Donald Trump Fired David Rubenstein

The private-equity billionaire spent decades building influence in the capital. Then his philanthropy collided with the president.
Lakota child Sophie Mousseau among a line of U.S. peace commissioners.

Finding Sophie

How a historian identified a Lakota child from a single photograph.
Garden rows on the cover of "Free Range Religion"

How Religious Food Movements Paved the Way for MAHA

A window into the ways that religious people have participated in and shaped the alternative food movement.
Houdini and a ghostly image of Lincoln.
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Radical Religion and Radical Politics

On the intersection of spiritualism with 19th century social reform movements.
Emergency hospital during influenza epidemic, Camp Funston, Kansas.
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The Things They Carried

How soldiers returning from World War I brought the Spanish flu back with them.
A woman stands next to a Christmas tree and two feeding horses

Silent Night?

How German immigrants brought Christmas celebrations to the United States.
Demonstrators at an anti-Vietnam War protest held at Bronx Science High School in New York in April 1968.

New Records Suggest Parents Collaborated With the FBI to Spy on Their Teens During the 1960s

As high school students embraced political activism, adults turned to the authorities to shield their sons and daughters from radical influences.
Sunday Morning in front of the Arch Street Meeting House, Philadelphia, 1811
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Quakers Against Thanksgiving

In colonial America, government “thanksgivings” blurred faith and politics. For Quakers, rejecting them was an act of religious conviction.
The military escort for the arrival of the Marquis de Lafayette forms at Castle Garden (1844) by F. J. Fritsch.

The Nation’s Guest

The Marquis de Lafayette’s final visit to the United States in 1825 can show us how to commemorate the Revolution.
Children eating Thanksgiving dinner in Harlem.

Make Thanksgiving Radical Again

The holiday’s real roots lie in abolition, liberation, and anti-racism. Let’s reconnect to that legacy.
Portrait of Benjamin Franklin reading.

Benjamin Franklin’s Experiments

The mindset Franklin demonstrated in his scientific work helps us understand his political accomplishments.
"Battle of Manila Bay" painting by James Gale Tyler (1898).

A “Little” War’s Foul Legacy

A new book offers bitter commentary on the onset of the age of American empire.
Murray Rothbard

It Has Always Been About Foreign Policy

Movement conservatism’s excommunications have always centered on one set of issues.
Statue of Liberty
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Who or Where?

On a late nineteenth century debate: was America exceptional, or were Americans exceptional because they descended from England?
A blank crossword puzzle

How Crossword Puzzles Underwrote Three of America’s Major Publishers

The origin stories of Simon & Schuster, Random House, and Farrar, Sraus and Giroux.
The Founding of Maryland by Emmanuel Leutze (1634).

Bejesuited: America’s First Catholics

A history of Catholic immigration and activity in colonial North America.
A picture of Betty MacKaye over the Appalachian Trail

The Tragic Origins of the Appalachian Trail

One grieving widower turned his trauma into inspiration for one of the country’s greatest outdoor ideas.
Collage art featuring Dorothy Martin

It’s One of the Most Influential Social Psychology Studies Ever. Was It All a Lie?

A classic book on UFO believers and their “cognitive dissonance” after aliens failed to land is called into question.
A collage of George Eyser, St. Louis imagery, and Olympic medals.

A Forgotten Turner Classic

Who was George Eyser, the one-legged German-American gymnast who astounded at the Olympic Games?
Harriet Tubman with family at her home in Auburn, NY circa 1885.

The Rescuer

In search of the Underground Railroad’s legendary conductor.
Blue sky like background, with colorful circle like planets.
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How Two Rebel Physicists Changed Quantum Theory

David Bohm and Hugh Everett were once ostracized for challenging the dominant thinking in physics. Now, science accepts their ideas.
The First Thanksgiving, 1621, by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris (1863–1930). (Universal History Archive / Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The Pilgrims Were Doomsday Cultists

The settlers who arrived in Plymouth were not escaping religious persecution. They left on the Mayflower to establish a theocracy in the Americas.
Statue of Richard Cobden.

The Forgotten History of Left-Wing Free Traders

Discussing the little-known lineage of leftists who helped shape modern ideas of free trade.
Youppi! mascot sitting in a baseball stadium

Master of Puppets

Bonnie Erickson got her start making puppets in Jim Henson's studio, then she became one of America's most beloved mascot designers. Here's how it happened.
"Wages for housework" posters: statue of liberty holding a broom and money, and an iron burning pants and the phrase "strike while the iron is hot."

The Care Factory

In the decades since the Wages for Housework movement, care work has become a site of profit in ways its leaders could never have predicted.
Jay Lovestone and David Dubinsky, radical American labor leaders, middle-1930s.
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Seeing Red

That time Stalin coined the term “American Exceptionalism.”
Nurses prepare food in a hospital kitchen.
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Counting Calories

Charlotte Biltekoff talks about the rise of calories at the turn of the 20th century and the push to get scientific nutritional ideas into American mainstream.
Hollywood screenwriter Samuel Ornitz speaks before the House Un-American Activities Committee

First Amendment in Flux: When Free Speech Protections Came Up Against the Red Scare

The congressional anti-communist hearings of the 1940s are a reminder that freedom of speech today is even more fragile than it may seem.
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