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Viewing 121–150 of 810 results.
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Bankrupt Authority
Advanced Placement testing is "a money-making racket that lets states off the hook for underfunding education."
by
KJ Shepherd
via
Contingent
on
March 31, 2024
Recovering the Left-Wing Free Trade Tradition
Free trade has been defended primarily by neoliberals who cared little about social justice or democracy. An examination of its history paints a different picture.
by
Marc-William Palen
via
LPE Project
on
March 21, 2024
The Problematic Past, Present, and Future of Inequality Studies
An intellectual history of inequality in economic theory reveals the ideological reasons behind the field’s resurgence in the last few decades.
by
Branko Milanović
,
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins
via
The Nation
on
March 20, 2024
Remember When the U.S. Secretly Built a Social Network to Destabilize Cuba?
U.S.-funded social networks were launched in 2010 with ZunZuneo and Piramideo in 2013.
by
Matt Novak
via
Gizmodo
on
March 15, 2024
The Nuclear Fallout Maps That Revealed a Contaminated Planet
The first maps of the nuclear contamination of the world reinforced our understanding of the entire biosphere as a radically interconnected ecological space.
by
Sebastian V. Grevsmühl
via
The MIT Press Reader
on
March 12, 2024
Edward R. Murrow Wasn’t the First Journalist to Question Joseph McCarthy’s Communist Witch Hunts
As the fear of communist subversion spread throughout America, McCarthy launched hearings that were based on scant evidence and overblown charges.
by
W. Joseph Campbell
via
The Conversation
on
March 1, 2024
Kissinger Revisited
The former secretary of state is responsible for virtually every American geopolitical disaster of the past half-century.
by
Rick Perlstein
via
The American Prospect
on
February 28, 2024
How We Lost Our Minds About UFOs
No, aliens haven’t visited the Earth. Why are so many smart people insisting otherwise?
by
Nicholson Baker
via
Intelligencer
on
January 31, 2024
partner
The Politics of Fear Is Damaging American Education—And Has Been for Decades
Politicians have often sought to remedy educational panic with remedies that do more harm than good.
by
Diana D'Amico Pawlewicz
via
Made By History
on
December 14, 2023
partner
‘Atoms for Peace’ Was Never All That Peaceful—And the World Is Still Living With the Consequences
The U.S. sought to rebrand nuclear power as a source of peace, but this message helped mask a violent history.
by
Tommy Song
via
Made By History
on
December 8, 2023
Microfilm Hidden in a Pumpkin Launched Richard Nixon’s Career 75 Years Ago
On Dec. 2, 1948, evidence stashed in a hollowed-out pumpkin incriminated suspected Soviet spy Alger Hiss and boosted a young Richard Nixon’s political status.
by
Gordon F. Sander
via
Retropolis
on
December 2, 2023
A People’s Obituary of Henry Kissinger
For decades, Kissinger kept the great wheel of American militarism spinning ever forward.
by
Greg Grandin
via
The Nation
on
November 30, 2023
Henry Kissinger, Who Shaped World Affairs Under Two Presidents, Dies at 100
He was the only person ever to be national security adviser and secretary of state at the same time. He was also the target of relentless critics.
by
Thomas W. Lippman
via
Washington Post
on
November 30, 2023
Henry Kissinger, War Criminal Beloved by America's Ruling Class, Finally Dies
In a demonstration of why he was able to kill so many people and get away with it, the day of his passage will be a solemn one in Congress and newsrooms.
by
Spencer Ackerman
via
Rolling Stone
on
November 30, 2023
Henry Kissinger: The Declassified Obituary
The primary sources on Kissinger’s controversial legacy.
by
Peter Kornbluh
,
Tom Blanton
,
William Burr
via
National Security Archive
on
November 29, 2023
Bad Shot, Mary
The mistress of JFK, there was a lot more than wealth, whiteness, and femininity to make Mary Pinchot Meyer a target of murder.
by
Devin Thomas O’Shea
via
Apocalypse Confidential
on
November 22, 2023
The Problem of the Unionized War Machine
Union workers in the US weapons industry present a paradox for anti-war labor activists, but a history of “conversion” campaigns offers a route.
by
Jeff Schuhrke
via
Jewish Currents
on
November 22, 2023
The U.S. Army Tried to Build a Secret Nuclear City under Greenland’s Ice
Long before Greenland’s shifting ice threatened sea level rise, it doomed one of the military’s most audacious Cold War projects.
by
George Bass
via
Washington Post
on
November 13, 2023
The Real Origins of America’s Gun Culture
“Gun Country” chronicles the transformation of guns from tangible weapons to ideological ammunition during the Cold War.
by
Becca Rothfeld
via
Washington Post
on
November 9, 2023
The Arab-Israeli War 50 Years Ago Brought Us Close to Nuclear Armageddon
As world leaders scramble to prevent the Israel-Hamas war from escalating, it is often forgotten just how close the Yom Kippur War came to all-out nuclear war.
by
Gordon F. Sander
via
Washington Post
on
October 10, 2023
Fit Nation
A conversation about "the gains and pains of America’s exercise obsession."
by
Natalia Mehlman Petrzela
,
Lara Freidenfelds
via
Nursing Clio
on
September 27, 2023
Two Cheers for the Cold War Liberals
There are certainly good grounds to criticize Cold War liberalism. But Samuel Moyn's new book, like similar critiques, has a classic baby-bathwater problem.
by
Joseph Stieb
via
War on the Rocks
on
September 15, 2023
Dangers and Enemies Everywhere
How Cold War liberalism abandoned the vocabulary of hope—and how we still live with the consequences.
by
George Scialabba
via
Democracy Journal
on
September 14, 2023
Rethinking Spy vs. Spy: A Hand From One Page, A Bomb From Another
Like the spies themselves, the image we have of something is often what gets us in trouble.
by
Gyasi Hall
via
Longreads
on
September 12, 2023
Is Liberalism a Politics of Fear?
A conversation about the Cold War’s profound and negative influence on the liberal worldview.
by
Samuel Moyn
,
Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins
via
The Nation
on
September 11, 2023
Samuel Moyn Can’t Stop Blaming Trumpism on Liberals
"Liberalism Against Itself" makes an incoherent attack on liberalism.
by
Jonathan Chait
via
Intelligencer
on
September 7, 2023
Memo to Liberals: The Cold War is Over
In “Liberalism Against Itself,” Samuel Moyn stresses the need to resuscitate an earlier and more rousing wave of thinkers.
by
Becca Rothfeld
via
Washington Post
on
August 11, 2023
George Kennan, Loser
The American foreign policy sage was driven as much by pessimism about the US as antipathy to the Soviet Union.
by
Ivan Krastev
,
Leonard Benardo
via
New Statesman
on
August 10, 2023
The Corporatization of Creativity
Our ways of thinking about thinking are a product of postwar business culture.
by
Charlie Tyson
via
The Chronicle of Higher Education
on
July 24, 2023
"Cry Baby Scientist": What Oppenheimer the Film Gets Wrong about Oppenheimer the Man
The so-called "father of the bomb" helped bring us prematurely into the age of existential risk.
by
Haydn Belfield
via
Vox
on
July 22, 2023
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