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Viewing 241–270 of 446 results.
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JFK Files: Revelations from the Covert Operations High Command
Special Group and PFIAB meeting minutes provide dramatic view of CIA operations.
by
Peter Kornbluh
,
Arturo Jimenez-Bacardi
via
National Security Archive
on
April 7, 2025
partner
How a Cold War Airlift Saved Berlin With Food, Medicine and Chocolate
A Soviet blockade around Berlin cut the city off from the West. But in 1948 U.S. and British pilots began to fly food, fuel and medicine to the Allied sectors.
via
Retro Report
on
March 20, 2025
Trump’s Deportations Are a Throwback to Red Scare Politics
The long tradition of the US government using border policy as a tool for political control, stretching back to Red Scare efforts to suppress left-wing dissent.
by
Kim Phillips-Fein
via
Jacobin
on
March 20, 2025
partner
Whose Side Are College Administrators On?
There’s a long history of politicians targeting student protesters — and of campus leaders abetting those efforts.
by
Lauren Lassabe Shepherd
via
HNN
on
March 19, 2025
Soft Power
What it means, why it matters, and where it started.
by
Lindsay M. Chervinsky
via
Imperfect Union
on
March 15, 2025
FBI and CIA Conducted Illegal Surveillance of 1960s Student Activists in the South
Newly declassified records reveal how paranoia about subversion in conservative states resulted in major constitutional violations.
by
Jeremy Kuzmarov
via
CovertAction Magazine
on
March 13, 2025
The Making of a Cold War Spy
The life and work of Frank Wisner, one of the CIA’s founding officers, offers us a portrait of American intelligence’s excesses.
by
Adam Hochschild
via
The Nation
on
March 11, 2025
How the Red Scare Reshaped American Politics
At its height, the political crackdown felt terrifying and all-encompassing. What can we learn from how the movement unfolded—and from how it came to an end?
by
Beverly Gage
via
The New Yorker
on
March 10, 2025
American Conservatism's Home Grown Defenses of Apartheid
A long and ugly history.
by
Zeb Larson
via
Liberal Currents
on
March 10, 2025
Growing Up U.S.A.I.D.
As a child in postings around the world, the author witnessed the agency’s complex relationship with American empire—and with autocrats everywhere.
by
Jon Lee Anderson
via
The New Yorker
on
February 25, 2025
Anvil, the Forgotten Magazine of Heartland Marxism
Anvil's popular vision for a multiracial socialism in the heart of the US could hardly be more urgent today.
by
Marc Blanc
via
Jacobin
on
February 23, 2025
Make South Africa Great Again?
How the country’s post-apartheid politics may inform the world view of Elon Musk and Donald Trump.
by
Isaac Chotiner
,
William Shoki
via
The New Yorker
on
February 19, 2025
partner
How Nixon’s 1972 China Visit Set the Stage for Today’s Tensions Over Taiwan
The legacy of Nixon's strategic ambiguity of acknowledging China's claim to Taiwan without fully committing.
via
Retro Report
on
February 18, 2025
Honey, I Forgot to Duck
Reagan’s capacity to inhabit and generate legend stemmed from his own impulse to substitute pleasing fictions for inconvenient facts.
by
Jackson Lears
via
London Review of Books
on
January 15, 2025
How Jimmy Carter Lost Evangelical Christians to the Right
The Baptist Georgia governor won evangelical Christian voters in the 1976 presidential election. Next time around, those voters changed sides—for the long haul.
by
Chris Lehmann
via
The Nation
on
December 30, 2024
The History of Gay Conservatism
LGBTQ voters overwhelmingly went for Harris, but the idea that gay voters are always going to be solidly blue is a myth.
by
Roger Lancaster
via
Damage
on
December 11, 2024
The Power Broker: Roy Cohn on Screen
The closeted right-wing operative has become a tragic character in the American repertory.
by
Mark Asch
via
Mubi
on
December 5, 2024
The Magic Thinking of Kennedy-ism
The hero worship of the family of American royalty has a dark side: a tendency toward conspiracism that fits with the MAGA movement.
by
Rick Perlstein
via
The American Prospect
on
December 5, 2024
The Thin Line Between Biopic and Propaganda
The success of “Reagan” reflects the market demands of a more fragmented moviegoing public—and reality.
by
Zach Schonfeld
via
The Atlantic
on
November 18, 2024
Review of "America's Philosopher: John Locke in American Intellectual Life"
We see what we want to see from philosophers such as Locke not because he wrote for our time (or “all time”) but because we imagine he did.
by
Raymond Haberski Jr.
via
American Literary History
on
November 15, 2024
US Labor and the Gaza War: Historical Perspective
Are we doomed to repetition? It’s something I worry about.
by
Tim Barker
via
Origins of Our Time
on
November 15, 2024
partner
Perhaps the Most Influential Single Propagandist for Fascism
On the lengths newspaper publishers took to reach new subscribers — and then drive them away — in the 1930s.
by
Terry Kirby
via
HNN
on
November 4, 2024
Call of Duty: Pentagon Ops
Inside the weird synergies that launched the videogaming industry—and made the Pentagon fantasies in Call of Duty its stock in trade.
by
Jesse Robertson
via
The Nation
on
October 24, 2024
How Racist Policies Destroyed Public Housing and Created the American Suburbs
The systematic post-war displacement of communities of color.
by
Tracy Rosenthal
,
Leonardo Vilchis
via
Literary Hub
on
September 25, 2024
partner
A Case of Unrequited Love
On Irving Howe and the New Left.
by
Ronnie Grinberg
via
HNN
on
September 24, 2024
How the “AFL-CIA” Undermined Labor Movements Abroad
During the Cold War, the AFL-CIO actively participated in efforts to suppress left-wing labor movements abroad.
by
Jeff Schuhrke
,
Cal Turner
,
Sara Van Horn
via
Jacobin
on
September 2, 2024
The Autocratic Allure
Why the far right embraces foreign tyrants.
by
Beverly Gage
via
Foreign Affairs
on
August 20, 2024
Cold War Tones
Two books that remind us that tone and timbre, musical style and sound, matter to history.
by
Michael J. Kramer
via
Society for U.S. Intellectual History
on
July 28, 2024
Chiquita Must Pay for Its Crimes in Latin America
70 years since President Árbenz was ousted for standing up to Chiquita, the firm might finally be held to account for its ties to a far-right paramilitary group in Colombia.
by
Klas Lundström
via
Jacobin
on
July 10, 2024
The Nutty Nineties
What was in the water circa 1992?
by
Katrina Gulliver
via
Law & Liberty
on
July 9, 2024
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