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The U.S. Failed to Learn the Lesson of Vietnam. Will it Learn From Afghanistan?
The U.S. can’t win wars for countries.
by
Andrew Wiest
via
Made By History
on
August 16, 2021
How America Failed in Afghanistan
The New Yorker staff writer Steve Coll on the humanitarian catastrophe that is now likely to engulf Afghan civilians, and how Joe Biden is shifting the blame.
by
Steve Coll
,
Isaac Chotiner
via
The New Yorker
on
August 15, 2021
A Crisis Without Keynes: The 1975 New York City Fiscal Crisis Revisited
An analysis of the factors that contributed to NYC's massive financial crisis in the 1970s, and the austere solutions that perpetuated it.
by
Michael Beyea Reagan
via
The Gotham Center
on
August 12, 2021
Haiti is Stuck in a Cycle of Upheaval. Its People Suffer The Most.
The assassination of the president is part of a pattern that undermines democracy.
by
Laurent Dubois
,
Millery Polyné
via
Washington Post
on
July 10, 2021
Can the 'Tubman Twenty' Help Bring Americans Together?
The new note comes 125 years after the free silver movement tried—and failed—to use currency to forge a national identity.
by
Peter W. Y. Lee
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
June 9, 2021
Police Reform Doesn’t Work
A century of failed liberal attempts at policing reform in Minneapolis suggests that none of the city’s current proposals will prevent another George Floyd.
by
Michael Brenes
via
Boston Review
on
April 23, 2021
American Journalism’s Role in Promoting Racist Terror
History must be acknowledged before justice can be done.
by
Channing Gerard Joseph
via
The Nation
on
April 19, 2021
House Arrest
How an automated algorithm constrained Congress for a century.
by
Dan Bouk
via
Data & Society
on
April 14, 2021
The Last Time a Vaccine Saved America
Sixty-six years ago, people celebrated the polio vaccine by embracing in the streets. Our vaccine story is both more extraordinary and more complicated.
by
Howard Markel
via
The New Yorker
on
April 12, 2021
A Posthumous Life
Family blessings are a curse, or they can be. The life of Henry Adams explained in his book Education.
by
Brenda Wineapple
via
New York Review of Books
on
April 8, 2021
How Will We Remember This?
A COVID memorial will have to commemorate shame and failure as well as grief and bravery.
by
Justin Davidson
via
Curbed
on
March 15, 2021
A History of Technological Hype
When it comes to education technology, school leaders have often leaped before they looked.
by
Adam Laats
,
Victoria E. M. Cain
via
Phi Delta Kappan
on
February 22, 2021
The Plan to Build a Capital for Black Capitalism
In 1969, an activist set out to build an African-American metropolis from scratch. What would have happened if Soul City had succeeded?
by
Kelefa Sanneh
via
The New Yorker
on
February 1, 2021
Where Is Dorsey Foultz?
When the D.C. Metropolitan Police failed to catch a murder suspect, white residents criticized and mocked. Black residents worried.
by
Sarah A. Adler
via
Contingent
on
January 9, 2021
The Past and Future of the Left in the Democratic Party
Centrist Democrats who blamed the left for election losses would do well to remember the people who have fought for and shaped the party’s history.
by
Michael Brenes
,
Michael Koncewicz
via
The Nation
on
December 9, 2020
The End of the Businessman President
Donald Trump’s catastrophic tenure will be the nail in the coffin of the worst idea in politics: that the government can be run like a corporation.
by
Kyle Edward Williams
via
The New Republic
on
December 9, 2020
How Did American Cities Become So Unequal?
A new history of Ed Logue and his vision of urban renewal documents the broken promises of midcentury liberalism.
by
Kim Phillips-Fein
via
The Nation
on
October 19, 2020
Howard Johnson’s, Host of the Bygone Ways
For more than seven decades American roads were dotted with the familiar orange roof and blue cupola of the ubiquitous Howard Johnson’s restaurants and Motor Lodges.
via
Sometimes Interesting
on
October 15, 2020
The Time Nixon’s Cronies Tried to Overturn a Presidential Election
The gambit was cynical and disruptive, but in the end it didn’t work.
by
David Greenberg
via
Politico Magazine
on
October 10, 2020
Faulkner Couldn’t Overcome Racism, But He Never Ignored It
That’s why the privileged White novelist’s work is still worth reading, Michael Gorra argues.
by
Chandra Manning
via
Washington Post
on
October 2, 2020
The Electoral Punt
It can be hard to know what the Founders intended when they didn't know, either.
by
Jonathan W. Wilson
via
Contingent
on
September 30, 2020
Built to Last
When overwhelmed unemployment insurance systems malfunctioned, governments blamed the 60-year-old programming language COBOL. But what really failed?
by
Mar Hicks
via
Logic
on
August 31, 2020
The Death and Rebirth of American Internationalism
As the 2020 presidential election nears, internationalists are plotting their return. But they still haven’t learned from the failure of liberal universalism.
by
Edward Fishman
via
Boston Review
on
August 11, 2020
partner
A Coronavirus Vaccine Can’t Come at the Expense of Fighting the Virus Now
Government investment into a cancer vaccine had drawbacks.
by
Robin Wolfe Scheffler
via
Made By History
on
July 24, 2020
Who Remembers the Panic of 1819?
We haven’t built many memorials to panics, recessions, or depressions, but maybe we should.
by
Jessica Lepler
via
Process: A Blog for American History
on
June 30, 2020
We Used to Run This Country
Iran and surplus imperialism.
by
Richard Beck
via
n+1
on
June 22, 2020
partner
Turn Out the Lights: When the Last American Diplomats Fled China
Untold stories of American diplomats who "lost" China.
by
Joe Renouard
via
HNN
on
May 10, 2020
War Has Been the Governing Metaphor for Decades of American Life
But the COVID-19 pandemic exposes its weaknesses.
by
Paul M. Renfro
via
TIME
on
April 15, 2020
Bad Romance
The afterlife of Vivian Gornick's "The Romance of American Communism" shows that we bear the weight of dead generations—and sometimes living ones, too.
by
Alyssa Battistoni
via
Dissent
on
April 13, 2020
When Centrists Sounded Like Bernie
If the Democratic Party won’t listen to the left, it should at least listen to itself from 30 years ago.
by
Ed Burmila
via
The Nation
on
April 7, 2020
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