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Viewing 751–774 of 774 results.
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See the Historic Maps Declassified by the CIA
A new gallery provides a rare look inside the 75-year history of the agency’s mapping unit.
by
Greg Miller
via
National Geographic
on
November 26, 2016
The Internet Should Be a Public Good
The Internet was built by public institutions — so why is it controlled by private corporations?
by
Ben Tarnoff
via
Jacobin
on
August 31, 2016
End of the End of History, Redux
Remember Perot?
by
Frank Guan
via
n+1
on
March 24, 2016
Internet Privacy, Funded By Spies
Spies, counterinsurgency campaigns, hippie entrepreneurs, privacy apps funded by the CIA.
by
Yasha Levine
via
Surveillance Valley
on
March 3, 2016
Ellis Island's Forgotten Final Act as a Cold War Detention Center
The idealistic interpretation of Ellis Island should be revisited.
by
Brianna Nofil
via
Atlas Obscura
on
February 2, 2016
Open to Inspection
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness in the age of surveillance.
by
Lewis H. Lapham
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
January 1, 2016
Atomic Anxiety and the Tooth Fairy: Citizen Science in the Midcentury Midwest
How the St. Louis Baby Tooth Study reconciled the ritual of childhood tooth loss with the geopolitics of nuclear annihilation.
by
Caroline Jack
,
Stephanie Steinhardt
via
The Appendix
on
November 26, 2014
Green House: A Brief History of “American Poetry”
Tracing its emergence of as a distinct cultural institution.
by
Frank Guan
via
Prelude
on
September 22, 2014
Our Mis-Leading Indicators
How statistical data came to rule public policy.
by
Stephen Macekura
via
Public Books
on
September 15, 2014
The Case for Female Astronauts: Reproducing Americans in the Final Frontier
Imagining a future that separates women from their biological identity seems so “drastic” as to be unimaginable—in 1962 and today.
by
Lisa Ruth Rand
via
The Appendix
on
July 15, 2014
The Twin Insurgency
The postmodern state is under siege from plutocrats and criminals who unknowingly compound each other’s insidiousness.
by
Nils Gilman
via
The American Interest
on
June 15, 2014
How Iowa Flattened Literature
With help from the CIA, Paul Engle’s writing students battled Communism and eggheaded abstraction. The damage to writing still lingers.
by
Eric Bennett
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
February 10, 2014
Almost Everything in “Dr. Strangelove” Was True
How Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove” exposed dangers inherent in nuclear command-and-control systems.
by
Eric Schlosser
via
The New Yorker
on
January 17, 2014
partner
Fierce Urgency of Now
Exploring the origins and impacts of the "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom," on that event's 50th anniversary.
via
BackStory
on
August 23, 2013
The True Story of History's Only Known Meteorite Victim
Ann Hodges was hit by a meteorite in her Alabama home in 1954.
by
Justin Nobel
via
National Geographic
on
February 20, 2013
Farewell, the American Century
Rewriting the past by adding in what's been left out.
by
Andrew J. Bacevich
,
Tom Engelhardt
via
Tom Dispatch
on
April 28, 2009
Watch Out For the Top Banana
Edward Bernays and the colonial adventures of the United Fruit Company.
by
Larry Tye
via
Cabinet
on
September 4, 2006
Great Migration Debates: Keywords in Historical Perspective
The use of the word "immigrant" in contemporary debates often reflects a lack of understanding of U.S. immigration history.
by
Donna Gabaccia
via
Social Science Research Council
on
July 28, 2006
Rethinking the War to End All Wars
For the players in the First World War, the goal was not to prevail but to avoid being seen as the loser.
by
Adam Gopnik
via
The New Yorker
on
August 16, 2004
Mythologizing the Bomb
The beauty of the atomic scientists' calculations hid from them the truly Faustian contract they scratched their names to.
by
E. L. Doctorow
via
The Nation
on
August 14, 1995
Jimmy Carter Toasts the Shah
The Shah’s reign witnessed years of oppression against the Iranian people, and Carter’s toast added fuel to the fire.
via
Voices & Visions
on
December 31, 1977
Jimmy Carter Promotes Human Rights
Carter’s speech lays out his commitment to implement human rights into U.S. foreign policy.
via
Voices & Visions
on
May 22, 1977
Lyndon B. Johnson's 1968 State of the Union Address
An unpopular Lyndon B. Johnson sought unity amid turmoil in his 1968 address to Congress.
by
Lyndon Baines Johnson
via
The American Presidency Project
on
January 17, 1968
President Kennedy's Cuban Missile Crisis Oval Office Address
In response to the build-up of Soviet nuclear missiles on Cuba, JFK ordered a quarantine of the island and military surveillance missions.
via
C-SPAN
on
October 22, 1962
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