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Stranger Dangers: The Right's History of Turning Child Abuse Into a Political Weapon
Josh Hawley’s attacks on Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson are part of a long, sad tradition.
by
Paul M. Renfro
,
Ali Breland
via
Mother Jones
on
March 28, 2022
American Mandarins
David Halberstam’s title The Best and the Brightest was steeped in irony. Did these presidential advisers earn it?
by
Edward Tenner
via
The American Scholar
on
March 24, 2022
The Long History of the U.S. Immigration Crisis
How Washington outsources its dirty work.
by
Ana Raquel Minian
via
Foreign Affairs
on
March 15, 2022
Was It Inevitable? A Short History of Russia’s War on Ukraine
To understand the tragedy of this war, it is worth going back beyond the last few weeks and months, and even beyond Vladimir Putin.
by
Keith Gessen
via
The Guardian
on
March 11, 2022
America’s Generation Gap on Ukraine
A decade or two ago, opposing NATO expansion to Ukraine was a position espoused by pillars of the American establishment. What happened?
by
Peter Beinart
via
The Beinart Notebook
on
January 24, 2022
Austerity Policies In The United States Caused ‘Stagflation’ In The 1970s
U.S. government policies must continue to support physical and social infrastructure spending amid the continuing pandemic to avoid ‘stagflation’.
by
Andrew Yamakawa Elrod
via
Washington Center For Equitable Growth
on
January 11, 2022
This Tree has Stood Here for 500 Years. Will it be Sold for $17,500?
Old-growth trees in Alaska's Tongass National Forest are embroiled in the politics of timber and climate change.
by
Juliet Eilperin
via
Washington Post
on
December 30, 2021
partner
How Prop. 187 Transformed the Immigration Debate and California Politics
Much of the anti-immigrant rhetoric and policy in the news today is similar to a movement that swept the country 20 years ago.
via
Retro Report
on
December 3, 2021
partner
Violence and Racism Against Haitian Migrants Was Never Limited to Agents on Horseback
American immigration policy towards Haitians has been cruel for decades.
by
Carl Lindskoog
via
Made By History
on
September 30, 2021
The Case for Partisanship
Bipartisanship might not be dead. But it is on life support. And it’s long past time we pulled the plug.
by
Osita Nwanevu
via
The New Republic
on
September 20, 2021
A Warning Ignored
America did exactly what the Kerner Commission on the urban riots of the mid-1960s advised against, and fifty years later reaped the consequences it predicted.
by
Jelani Cobb
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 29, 2021
The Legacy of 9/11
After 20 years of foreign policy failures following the attacks on the World Trade Center, America is finally rethinking its place in the world.
by
Stephen Wertheim
via
Prospect Magazine
on
July 14, 2021
The Right May Be Giving Up the “Lost Cause,” but What’s Next Could Be Worse
The GOP’s new embrace of Lincoln, emancipation, and Juneteenth is no sign of progress.
by
Rebecca Onion
,
Matthew Karp
via
Slate
on
June 25, 2021
The End of Friedmanomics
The famed economist’s theories were embraced by Beltway power brokers in both parties. Finally, a Democratic president is turning the page on a legacy of ruin.
by
Zachary D. Carter
via
The New Republic
on
June 17, 2021
partner
The U.S. War on Drugs Helped Unleash the Violence in Colombia Today
Efforts to combat narcotics and communism militarized the country's security forces.
by
Kyle Longley
via
Made By History
on
June 8, 2021
partner
Biden Will Allow Undocumented Students To Access Pandemic Relief
For decades, policymakers have debated who may access public education and the social safety net.
by
Sarah R. Coleman
via
Made By History
on
June 1, 2021
Long, Strange TRIPS: The Grubby History of How Vaccines Became Intellectual Property
Not long ago, life-saving medical know-how was viewed as belonging to everyone. What happened?
by
Alexander Zaitchik
via
The New Republic
on
June 1, 2021
partner
Trump’s Border Wall Belongs to Biden Now
A border policy divorced from history can’t do what policymakers want.
by
Kevan Q. Malone
via
Made By History
on
April 11, 2021
partner
The DHS Secretary Could Chart a New Path on Immigration. Will He?
Alejandro Mayorkas and the limits of liberal law-and-order immigration politics.
by
Adam Goodman
via
Made By History
on
February 2, 2021
The Romance of American Clintonism
The politically complacent ’90s produced a surprisingly large number of mainstream American rom-coms about fighting the Man.
by
Meagan Day
via
Jacobin
on
October 21, 2020
A Historian of Economic Crisis on the World After COVID-19
A leading expert on financial crises explains how the pandemic is upending economic orthodoxy and raising the stakes of the 2020 election.
by
Eric Levitz
,
Adam Tooze
via
Intelligencer
on
August 7, 2020
Whose Century?
One has to wonder whether the advocates of a new Cold War have taken the measure of the challenge posed by 21st-century China.
by
Adam Tooze
via
London Review of Books
on
July 22, 2020
partner
Liberal Reform Threatens to Expand the Police Power – Just as it Did in the Past
How calls for “real reforms” have resulted in measures that further shield police from real accountability.
by
Max Felker-Kantor
via
HNN
on
June 28, 2020
Conservative Ideology and the Environment
“Big money alone does not fully explain the Republican embrace of the gospel of more.”
by
Jonathan H. Adler
via
Regulation
on
June 1, 2020
The Right’s Reign on the Air Waves
How talk radio established the power of the modern Republican Party.
by
Jake Bittle
via
The New Republic
on
June 1, 2020
The Birth and Death of Single-Payer in the Democratic Party
In 1988, Jesse Jackson ran for president on a platform that included universalist policies like single-payer. His success terrified establishment Democrats.
by
Vicente Navarro
via
Jacobin
on
May 5, 2020
partner
The Policy Mistakes From the 1990s That Have Made Covid-19 Worse
Being tough on crime and cutting benefits from the poor left millions more susceptible to disease.
by
Heather Ann Thompson
via
Made By History
on
May 4, 2020
The Long Roots of Corporate Irresponsibility
Nicholas Lemann’s history of 20th century corporations, Transaction Man, shows how an unrelenting faith in the market and profit doomed the American economy.
by
Rick Perlstein
via
The Nation
on
March 17, 2020
Militarize, Destabilize, Deport, Repeat
Plan Colombia functioned like an ideological laboratory for forever war in the twenty-first century.
by
Stephen D. Cohen
via
The Baffler
on
March 5, 2020
How the Senate Paved the Way for Coronavirus Profiteering, and How Congress Could Undo It
Bernie Sanders pushed a measure through the House to require drugs funded by public research funds to be sold at a reasonable cost. The Senate shot it down.
by
Ryan Grim
,
Aída Chávez
via
The Intercept
on
March 2, 2020
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