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Viewing 781–810 of 828 results.
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For Republicans, an Unpopular Tax Cut May Be Better Than Nothing – But Still Not Enough
In 1948, the GOP passed the third biggest tax cut in U.S. history. In the next election, they learned the devil is in the details.
by
Joseph J. Thorndike
via
Tax Analysts
on
November 30, 2017
Daniel Ellsberg Is Still Thinking About the Papers He Didn’t Get to Leak
The man who leaked the Pentagon Papers is back with a new book, The Doomsday Machine.
by
Andrew Rice
via
Intelligencer
on
November 28, 2017
original
The Other End of the Telescope
Considering astronomy's history from the shadow of the Arecibo Observatory reveals the discipline's intimate ties to imperialism.
by
David Singerman
on
November 24, 2017
The Dark and Divisive History of America’s Thanksgiving Hymn
How a beloved song with origins in 16th-century Europe captures both a holiday's spirit of unity and a country's legacy of exclusion.
by
Neil J. Young
via
The Atlantic
on
November 23, 2017
A Birthday Party for This Patsy?
Every year, a group in New Orleans gets together to celebrate the birthday of Lee Harvey Oswald, who they believe was framed.
by
Rien Fell
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
November 9, 2017
How John Wayne Became a Hollow Masculine Icon
The actor’s persona was inextricable from the toxic culture of Cold War machismo.
by
Stephen Metcalf
via
The Atlantic
on
November 9, 2017
Making History Safe Again: What Ken Burns Gets Wrong About Vietnam
Vietnam was not a "tragic misunderstanding" but a campaign of "imperial aggression."
by
Christian G. Appy
,
Patrick Lawrence
via
Salon
on
October 15, 2017
Marx in the United States
A conversation with the author of a forthcoming book about the twists and turns of Marx's legacy in America.
by
Andrew Hartman
,
Magnus Møller Ziegler
,
Tobias Dias
via
U.S. Intellectual History Blog
on
October 4, 2017
Episode-by-Episode Reviews: "The Vietnam War"
Watching Ken Burns' latest epic with a historian who has written extensively about the war.
by
Christian G. Appy
via
Process: A Blog for American History
on
September 18, 2017
Studying the Vietnam War
How the scholarship has changed.
by
Mark Atwood Lawrence
via
Humanities
on
September 16, 2017
Who is the Enemy Here?
The Vietnam War pictures that moved them most.
by
Alice Gabriner
via
TIME
on
September 15, 2017
The Presidency Never Recovered After Vietnam
The war opened the credibility gap. What we’ve learned since has only widened it.
by
Ken Burns
,
Lynn Novick
via
The Atlantic
on
September 12, 2017
partner
When ‘Free Speech’ Becomes a Political Weapon
What we can learn from liberal anti-communists.
by
Jennifer Delton
via
Made By History
on
August 22, 2017
Conservatives Say Campus Speech Is Under Threat. That’s Been True for Most of History.
There’s never been a golden age of free speech at American universities.
by
Todd Gitlin
via
Washington Post
on
August 11, 2017
A New View of Grenada’s Revolution
The documentary, "The House on Coco Road" tells the little-known story of Grenada's revolution and subsequent U.S. invasion.
by
Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
via
New York Review of Books
on
July 26, 2017
partner
How our Appetite for Cheap Food Drove Rural America to Trump
Consumer demand and government policy decimated rural America.
by
Benjamin Davison
via
Made By History
on
June 30, 2017
How Congress Failed to Plan for Doomsday
What would happen if some crazed gunman or terrorist massacred Congress? We don’t really know — and that’s bad news for our democracy.
by
Garrett M. Graff
via
Politico Magazine
on
June 15, 2017
The Empire’s Amnesia
When it comes to imperialism, Latin America never forgets, and the United States never remembers.
by
Greg Grandin
,
Jacobin
via
Jacobin
on
May 19, 2017
The Ugly History Behind Trump’s Attacks on Civil Servants
President Trump’s criticisms of government workers have something in common with Joe McCarthy’s.
by
Landon Storrs
via
Politico Magazine
on
March 26, 2017
Yes, We’ve Done It Too
A history of the United States meddling in the elections of other countries.
by
Jess Engebretson
via
KQED
on
March 2, 2017
Leftovers / Vapor Trails
Clouds and conspiracies.
by
D. Graham Burnett
via
Cabinet
on
February 28, 2017
A Wonderful Life
How postwar Christmas embraced spaceships, nukes, and cellophane.
by
Sarah Archer
,
Lisa Hix
via
Collectors Weekly
on
December 15, 2016
Is a Mission to Mars Morally Defensible Given Today’s Real Needs?
Elon Musk and the rise of Silicon Valley’s strange trickle-down science.
by
Andrew Russell
,
Lee Vinsel
via
Aeon
on
December 1, 2016
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
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