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Norman Podhoretz.

The ‘Filthy Little Slum Child’ Who Remade the American Right

The intellectual world that Norman Podhoretz created.
This 1822 sketch is believed to depict Kaomi Moe as the standing kahili bearer at left, attending to his aikāne Kuakini.

Kamehameha III and His Joint King

A history of Hawai‘i’s aikāne relationships between men and how they were reshaped and suppressed after the arrival and moral influence of Western missionaries.
Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture) and H. Rap Brown (Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin) laughing with guns.

Remembering Imam Jamil al-Amin

How the modern Left can carry his radical legacy forward.
Shakers dancing during worship.

Once Seen as a Threat to Society, Shakers Are Now Part of the Sound of America

A new film depicts part of the long history of Shaker worship.
Cursor arrows caught in a spider web.

How the Web Was Lost

The Internet was not meant to suck.
American Flag in front of a church steeple.

Religious Freedom and the Founding

Religious liberty owes much to Jefferson and Madison, but the "impregnable wall" doesn't do justice to the founders vision.
An African American man and a white soldier from the 23rd New York.
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Fighting for Union

One man’s struggle to pick a side of the war, his ultimate choice, and how powerful the of concepts “liberty and union” were in motivating Northern soldiers.
Theodore Roosevelt

Meritocracy and Diversity: The Rooseveltian Perspective

Meritocracy and diversity often clash. Roosevelt embodied that tension, struggling to balance talent, inclusion, and equal opportunity.
Engraving of Washington kneeling, entitled "The Prayer at Valley Forge"

Did Washington Kneel in Prayer at Valley Forge?

How the myth says more about Americans’ values and church–state debates than about historical fact.
Aerial view of the Warner Bros studio lot.

Whether Netflix or Paramount Buys Warner Bros., Entertainment Oligopolies are Back

Hollywood has seen this movie before. Entertainment oligopolies are bigger and more anticompetitive than ever.
Migrants and Border Patrol agents at US-Mexico border

The Long, Lethal History of Trump's 'Invasion' Rhetoric

In 2018, Trump began to routinely describe immigration as an ‘invasion.’ That rhetoric has fueled deadly violence for nearly two centuries.
Family gathering around a christamas tree wearing fancy clothing.

Silent Night, Political Night: Christmas Films in Cold War America

Christmas films like to pretend they’re harmless seasonal comfort, but history says otherwise: postwar American cinema used Christmas to negotiate conformity.
Ken Burns

What’s Wrong with The American Revolution by Ken Burns 

Ken Burns’s latest PBS series is long on muskets and bayonets, but the history of the American Revolution remains strangely understated.
Collage of Donald Trump, a slaughterhouse, and the book "The Jungle".

We Never Left Upton Sinclair’s Jungle

In 1905, Upton Sinclair documented the horrors in America’s slaughterhouses and meatpacking plants. In 2025, Donald Trump is making them worse.
A mother talks to a welfare worker in 1958.

Hidden Casualties

The burden welfare policies place on eligibility technicians.
Illustration of Henry Ford looking evil holding a town in his hand standing in a factory.

We’re Living in the World Henry Ford Built

Ford was a raving bigot and a tyrant who wanted complete control over his workers. Ford is a perfect example of why rich capitalists should not run the world.
Miami in the 1950s.

Enemies of the People

A forgotten race war in McCarthy-era Miami.
White paper peeled back to reveal presidents Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon and Donald Trump in red stripes.

Backlash Presidents

How three eras of racial progress gave way to the presidencies of Johnson, Nixon, and Trump.
Sunflowers in front of the Civaux Nuclear Power Plant in Civaux, France.

We Could Have an Inexpensive, Clean-Energy Future

For 70 years, irrational fear of low-level radiation blocked the path to an energy-rich future. We must get over it.
Political cartoon depicting the Monroe Doctrine as a fence keeping Germans and British out of the Americas.

The Monroe Doctrine in 2025

A refresher on the original intent of John Quincy Adams's 1823 policy statement in the wake of the recent announcement of the "Trump Corollary."
1952 artwork of six different people standing in separate boxes.

Nothing Left Inside

How America learned not to fear the inner self but lost its places of belonging.
George Washington portrait in which he rests his hand on his hip.

A Great Reputation Among Men: Race and Contested Masculinities in the Early American Republic

A Quaker abolitionist hoped to convince the Virginian Founders to end slavery by appealing to their sense of manhood. They were not persuaded.
An illustration of two children watching English ships sail to the American colonies.

The Tuttle Twins Learn Incredibly Wrong History Lessons

The libertarian propaganda series is back and worse than ever.
Mark Tayac, the chief of the Piscataway Nation, in traditional dress.

We’re Still Here: The Still-Evolving Story of the Piscataway Nation

Long before the Trail of Tears, English colonists drove Maryland’s Indigenous tribes from their land. Piscataway descendants want people to know their history.
Newspapers in the background with "Discrediting the Red Scare" book on top.

On Veterans’ Day, Remember James Kutcher, Hero of the Red Scare

More than 75 years ago, one veteran fought the U.S. government’s right-wing blacklists. Today, we should learn from his example.
A newspaper with the headline "Judge Rules Intelligent Design is 'Not Science.'"

Creationism in the Classroom: Does It Matter?

Kitzmiller 20 years on.
Illustration of young white people smoking weed.

Donald Trump Just Brought a Long-Sought Policy Goal Closer Than Ever

It all might have been different without one night in 1977. A scandal followed—and, five decades later, no one agrees on what happened.
Collection of mass market paperbacks

Stories for the Masses

The Mass Market paperback format is ending with a whimper.
Vogue Magazine stand.

The Ghosts of Media Past

Whatever happened to journalism?
"The Sack of Corinth" depicts the tragic 146 BC destruction of the ancient Greek city by Romans.

They Were All Our Ancestors

Nationalism chooses sides in the most awful family drama of all time. It sides with the evildoers, and never with their victims, and teaches you to do the same.
A political cartoon of Stephen Miller separating families with tentacle-like arms.

Inside Stephen Miller’s Dark Plot to Build a MAGA Terror State

Descended from Jewish immigrants, Stephen Miller's project is to close the country to people like his ancestors.
"We The People" Constitution on top of many folders of paper.

Conservatives Want the Antebellum Constitution Back

The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are in trouble.
Police outside of the New York Times building.

The Genocides The New York Times Forgot

The paper’s Gaza coverage continues its pattern of downplaying US-backed atrocities in Bangladesh, East Timor, and Guatemala.
Driving along the border wall, May 2025.

A Theology of Smuggling

In the early 1980s Tucson, activists and religious leaders joined forces to protect refugees at the U.S.-Mexico border, galvanizing the Sanctuary Movement.
A rendering for the Chicago Torture Justice Memorial

Chicago Torture Justice Memorial To Be Built in Washington Park

After years of delays, construction is set to begin on the Chicago Torture Justice Memorial.
Illustration of a man typing on a computer with the Star of David as the computer's image.

The Return of the Jewish Question

The “Jewish Question” is a scapegoating conspiracy. This essay traces its appeal, partial truths, and why it falsely absolves America of blame.
Scene in a Shakespearean play in which a man has been killed by sword.

The Real Watergate Scandal

A myth and its legacy.
A jury box in a courtroom.
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Does a Jury Need to Have 12 Members?

Why jury size matters.
A flyer for a Pete Seeger concert in Pittsburgh.

Pete Seeger in Pittsburgh Town

In April 1962, Pete Seeger was abruptly banned from performing a scheduled set for children in Pittsburgh. The surrounding debate says a lot about the city.
African American soldier
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Fighting for Liberation

The important moral and tactical contributions of African-American soldiers in the Union Army.
Trademark registration by Peninsular Stove Company for "Peninsular" Furnaces Stoves and Ranges.
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Family Time

What winter was like before the stove revolution, and the tension between comfort and family values.
Benjamin Franklin reading a draft of the Declaration of Independence.

The Evolution of the American Declaration of Independence

The Declaration drew on Enlightenment ideas to assert equality, justify independence, and inspire lasting debates over rights and slavery.
Seymour Hersh

"Cover-Up" Follows Seymour Hersh’s Life Uncovering Secrets

The documentary depicts the kind of maverick journalism we desperately need in our authoritarian times.
Jeffrey Epstein and unidentified African soldiers.

Epstein, Israel, and the CIA: How The Iran–Contra Planes Landed at Les Wexner’s Base

Jeffrey Epstein helped Leslie Wexner repurpose the CIA’s Iran–Contra planes from arms smuggling to shipping lingerie.
Henry David Thoreau

On Henry David Thoreau’s Ultimate Instrument of Perception, the “Kalendar”

Exploring Henry David Thoreau's meticulous track of natural phenomena.
Death Bed of Lincoln
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This Republic of Suffering

The enormous scale of death in the Civil War, and how it altered the American way of dying.
Decoration Day stage with flags and bunting.
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Representing the Dead

The hosts discuss the history of American war memorials.
A movie still from Scarface (1932) depicting members of the mafia.

Mob Rules

The Chicago Outfit’s second life as nostalgia—and as presidential politics.
Photo of Norman Podhoretz

The Longest Journey Is Over

With the death of Norman Podhoretz at 95, the transition from New York’s intellectual golden age to the age of grievance and provocation is complete.
Ernest Hardman in studio

How Detroit Became a Hub for Black Art

A decade before the mainstream Black Arts Movement, Detroit underwent a transformation of its own.
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