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Putin’s Nuclear Threats Evoke Cold War Tensions of the Cuban Missile Crisis
Russia’s recent nuclear threats have revived Cold War animosity with roots in the Cuban missile crisis.
via
Retro Report
on
February 23, 2023
Confronting the Iraq War
Melvyn Leffler’s book on the roots of the Iraq invasion demonstrates the pitfalls of excessive trust in one’s sources, especially when they're top policymakers.
by
Joseph Stieb
via
War on the Rocks
on
January 30, 2023
Small Nations, Big Feelings
In the 1930s, Americans fell in love with Czechoslovakia and Spain; today, it’s Ukraine. What happens when one finds a “second mother country”?
by
Madelyn Lugli
via
Public Books
on
October 27, 2022
partner
After 50 Years, the Truth About the Vietnam Peace Agreement Remains Elusive
The Pentagon's official history says that a heavy bombardment by B-52s in 1972 pushed the North Vietnamese to return to negotiated peace. What are the facts?
by
Arnold Isaacs
via
HNN
on
October 23, 2022
Ken Burns Turns His Lens on the American Response to the Holocaust
Commemorating the Holocaust has become a central part of American culture, but the nation’s reaction in real time was another story.
by
James McAuley
via
The New Yorker
on
September 18, 2022
We Have Always Been Global: Tribal Nations in the Democratic Slide
In the 19th century, Native American nations were early pioneers in constitutional democracy.
by
Noah Ramage
via
Perspectives on History
on
June 21, 2022
Developmental Realism
Now is a critical time to acquire a better understanding of this misunderstood and oversimplified philosophy known as Neomercantilism.
by
Justin H. Vassallo
via
Phenomenal World
on
June 16, 2022
Insurance For (and Against) the Empire
Marine insurance itself was a business that flourished during periods of war and uncertainty. It had a complex relationship with the British state.
by
Hannah Farber
via
Commonplace
on
April 5, 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
partner
Ukraine Shows We Need to Learn the History of Peace Movements to Break The Habit of War
When the war in Ukraine finally ends, will we take peace organizations and peace movements more seriously?
by
Charles F. Howlett
via
HNN
on
March 13, 2022
partner
The Bond That Explains Why Some on the Christian Right Support Putin’s War
Russia has become an ally in a global movement.
by
Bethany Moreton
via
Made By History
on
March 5, 2022
Daniel Schorr and Nixon’s Tricky Road to Redemption
Nixon portrayed himself as a victim of the press. But from the 1952 Checkers speech through his post-presidency, he proved to be an able manipulator of the media.
by
Ryan Reft
via
Tropics of Meta
on
February 25, 2022
The International MLK
“The social revolution which is taking place in this country is not an isolated, detached phenomenon. It is part of a worldwide revolution that is taking place.”
by
Robert Greene II
via
Black Perspectives
on
January 17, 2022
The Insurers’ Wars
When Thomas Jefferson’s administration was debating whether to declare war against Britain, it came up against America’s wealthy and influential marine underwriters.
by
Hannah Farber
via
Broadstreet
on
December 29, 2021
The War on Terror: 20 Years of Bloodshed and Delusion
From the beginning, the War on Terror merged red-hot vengeance with calculated opportunism. Millions are still paying the price.
by
Tariq Ali
via
The Nation
on
September 7, 2021
The US Lost in Afghanistan. But US Imperialism Isn’t Going Anywhere.
The US suffered grave losses in Iraq and Afghanistan, but we shouldn’t mistake revisions of US military strategy for a turn away from imperialist ambitions.
by
Gilbert Achcar
via
Jacobin
on
September 4, 2021
partner
The U.S. and Russia Could Join Forces to Get People Vaccinated. They Did Before.
The forgotten history of Soviet-American vaccine diplomacy.
by
Yana Demeshko
,
Ruth Gabor
,
Ivan Grek
,
Kristen Ho
via
Made By History
on
September 1, 2021
Revisiting Roosevelt and Churchill's 'Atlantic Charter'
Can the partnership born on a maritime U.S.-U.K. summit still protect democracy?
by
Paul Kennedy
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
August 27, 2021
New Documents Reveal the Bloody Origins of America's Long War On Drugs
When President Nixon launched the war on drugs in 1971, it set off a bloody chain reaction in Mexico as new documents reveal.
by
Benjamin T. Smith
via
TIME
on
August 24, 2021
partner
Drug Prohibition and the Political Roots of Cartel Violence in Mexico
Until both American and Mexican police forces stop treating it like a war, the violence of drug prohibition won't stop.
by
Benjamin T. Smith
via
HNN
on
August 8, 2021
Elkison v. Deliesseline: The South Carolina Negro Seaman Act of 1822 in Federal Court
Elkison v. Deliesseline presented a federal court with the question of whether a state could incarcerate and enslave a free subject of a foreign government.
by
Jake Kobrick
via
Federal Judicial Center
on
August 5, 2021
The US Drug Industry Used to Oppose Patents – What Changed?
Patent medicine used to be associated with fraud and profiteering. What shifted the industry's positions on medical ethics and intellectual property?
by
Joseph M. Gabriel
via
The Conversation
on
June 29, 2021
The Hidden Stakes of the Infrastructure Wars
The fight over the American Jobs Plan reflects a long history of competing visions of public works—and, most of all, who should benefit from rebuilding.
by
David Alff
via
Boston Review
on
June 25, 2021
Liberal Nationalism is Back. It Must Start to Think Globally.
Globalism is out. Nationalism is in. Progressives who think they can jump aboard are dangerously naive.
by
Jeremy Adelman
via
Aeon
on
April 29, 2021
The Book That Stopped an Outbreak of Nuclear War
A new history of the Cuban missile crisis emphasizes how close the world came to destruction—and how severe a threat the weapons still pose.
by
Andre Pagliarini
via
The New Republic
on
April 16, 2021
The Black Refugee Tradition
Undocumented Black migrants struggle to have their asylum rights recognized in the United States. Groups have been asking President Biden to stop deportations.
by
Sean Gallagher
via
Black Perspectives
on
April 7, 2021
The Competing Visions of English and Esperanto
How English and Esperanto offer competing visions of a universal language.
by
Stephanie Tam
via
The Believer
on
April 1, 2021
partner
George Shultz: The Last Progressive
A steadfast Republican committed to union-management cooperation, peace through treaties, competitive capitalism, and empowerment of African-Americans.
by
Ron Schatz
via
HNN
on
February 28, 2021
What Dignity Demands
A new book persuasively places Malcolm X and Martin Luther King at the center of each other’s most dramatic transformations.
by
Brandon M. Terry
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 18, 2021
The Day Nuclear War Almost Broke Out
In the nearly sixty years since the Cuban missile crisis, the story of near-catastrophe has only grown more complicated.
by
Elizabeth Kolbert
via
The New Yorker
on
October 5, 2020
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