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Ronald Reagan
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Revisiting a Transformational Speech: The Culture War Scorecard
Social conservatives won some and lost some since Pat laid down the marker.
by
Michael Barone
via
The American Conservative
on
May 30, 2018
151 Years of America’s Housing History
From the first tenement regulation to work requirements for public-housing residents, these are key moments in housing policy.
via
The Nation
on
May 24, 2018
The Disputed Second Life of an American Internment Camp
A debate over a planned fence around the site where people of Japanese ancestry, mostly American citizens, were forcibly interned.
by
Alastair Boone
via
CityLab
on
May 24, 2018
partner
Would Firing Scott Pruitt Save the EPA?
Not unless the most dangerous assault in the EPA's history also ends.
by
Leif Fredrickson
,
Jennifer Liss Ohayon
,
Christopher Sellers
via
Made By History
on
May 22, 2018
Ford Says Farewell
America’s most iconic automaker plans to drive almost all of their passenger sedans into the sunset by 2020.
by
Telly Davidson
via
The American Conservative
on
May 16, 2018
The Rise of the Victims’-Rights Movement
How a conservative agenda and a feminist cause came together to transform criminal justice.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
May 15, 2018
partner
Iran, North Korea, Russia: How the Nuclear Threat Re-emerged
Countries are expanding their nuclear arsenals. So why is the public so complacent about the risk of nuclear catastrophe?
by
Noah Madoff
,
Harvey Burrell
via
Retro Report
on
May 15, 2018
The Forgotten Baldwin
Baldwin demands that the Atlanta child murders be more than a mere media spectacle or crime story, and that black lives matter.
by
Joseph Vogel
via
Boston Review
on
May 14, 2018
The Long, Tortured History of the Job Guarantee
How liberals, over decades, worked to undermine a proposal that has long enjoyed public support.
by
Peter-Christian Aigner
,
Michael Brenes
via
The New Republic
on
May 11, 2018
Teacher Strikes Might Hurt Republicans This Time
Labor unrest harmed Democrats in the 1960s and 1970s. This time the GOP might be the loser.
by
Stephen Mihm
via
Bloomberg
on
April 27, 2018
The Hardest Job in the World
What if the problem isn’t the president—it’s the presidency?
by
John Dickerson
via
The Atlantic
on
April 17, 2018
The Vietnam War and White Power
A conversation with the author of "Bring the War Home: The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America."
by
Kathleen Belew
,
Sean Illing
via
Vox
on
April 13, 2018
partner
How the Haitian Refugee Crisis Led to the Indefinite Detention of Immigrants
It wasn't always this way.
by
Carl Lindskoog
via
Made By History
on
April 9, 2018
Secret Use of Census Info Helped Send Japanese Americans to Internment Camps in WWII
The abuse of data from the 1940 census has fueled fears about a citizenship question on the 2020 census form.
by
Lori Aratani
via
Retropolis
on
April 6, 2018
How Portraiture Gave Rise to the Glamour of Guns
American portraiture with its visual allure and pictorial storytelling made gun ownership desirable.
by
Kim Sajet
via
Smithsonian
on
March 23, 2018
partner
The Russian ‘Fake News’ Campaign That Damaged the United States — in the 1980s
The 2016 election wasn't the first time that a disinformation campaign was used against America.
by
Alexander Poster
via
Made By History
on
March 12, 2018
Hollywood Has Always Been Political. And it Hasn’t Always Been Liberal.
Conservatives have used celebrity glitz effectively, too.
by
Kathryn Cramer Brownell
via
Washington Post
on
March 2, 2018
The Whitewashing of King's Assassination
The death of Martin Luther King Jr. wasn’t a galvanizing event, but the premature end of a movement that had only just begun.
by
Vann R. Newkirk II
via
The Atlantic
on
March 1, 2018
Immigrants Welcome*
Trump’s Muslim ban was not just an abberation: US citizenship has long been predicated on whiteness as it was understood in 1790.
by
Maytha Alhassan
via
Boston Review
on
February 6, 2018
What Everyone Gets Wrong About LBJ’s Great Society
It wasn't some radical left-wing pipedream. It was moderate; and it worked.
by
Joshua Zeitz
via
Politico Magazine
on
January 28, 2018
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