Free Teaching Guide
February 4, 2008
Bring America‘s most incisive writers and editors to your classroom with free teaching material from The Nation.
· FREE Weekly Teaching Guides and Educator Email Newsletter
· Discounted subscriptions.
To download the teaching guide click here
-
Feature
The CIA’s Jose: Case Study in Cynicism
Long before a top bureaucrat was exposed for destroying secret interrogation tapes, the CIA shrouded his identity, making the press corps complicit in practices that would offend the nation’s conscience.
Ted Gup
-
Bush’s Iran/Argentina Terror Frame-Up
The Bush Administration cites a 1994 bombing in Argentina to tar Iran as a sponsor of global terror. But a fresh probe finds no evidence of an Iran connection.
Gareth Porter
-
A Conversation with Taylor Branch
MLK’s biographer on presidents, politics, racial injustice, poverty and war.
Bruce Wallace
-
NIMBY Comes to China
In Shanghai, angry, middle-class protesters say a high-speed train will wreck their quality of life. This new form of dissent could be one of the biggest challenges China will face.
Jeffrey Wasserstrom
-
Suicide Is Painless
Kang’s political mentor–and reputed former lover–is found with a bullet in his brain. As the media is poised to pounce, she readies her talking points with a growing sense of dread.
Gary Phillips
-
The Mourning After
The antiabortion movement has found a new face to exploit for political gain. And it’s male.
Sarah Blustain
-
Experts in Terror
The US government relies heavily on the testimony of self-styled terrorism experts in prosecuting the “war on terror.” But how credible are they?
Petra Bartosiewicz
-
Editorial
Desperately Seeking Stimulus
An economy addicted to growth, bubbles, downsizing and lending sprees–has become disconnected from the real economy of ordinary human needs.
Barbara Ehrenreich
-
CSI: Iraq
Despite the cosmetic acts of President Bush, his undertakers and enablers, America’s Iraq is still a corpse.
Tom Engelhardt
-
Racial Politics, Clinton Style
No matter who injected the issue of race and gender into the Democratic presidential campaign, it’s not going away.
Ari Berman
-
Long Roe to Hoe
Improving the sorry state of US reproductive health policy requires serious shifts within the women’s movement and the abortion rights movement.
Frances Kissling and Kate Michelman
-
Noted.
Victor Navasky on failed punditry,Frida Berrigan on Bush’s Israeli pilgrimage,Esther Kaplan on activist nurses.The Editors
-
Reconstruction Lessons
Advocates of African-Americans and women achieve more by working together than by fighting.
Eric Foner
-
Twin Disasters
When will the candidates cease their petty sniping and address the real issues: the Iraq War and the faltering economy?
The Editors
-
GET UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS FOR LESS THAN $3 A MONTH!
-
Column
Bill and Hill’s Dangerous Game
The Clintons cannot compete with the enthusiasm Obama sets off so they are trying to destroy it. They just may succeed–but at an awful price.
Nicholas von Hoffman
-
Playing Politics with Bankers
Now that Dennis Kucinich is out of the presidential debates, don’t expect Clinton or Obama to hold unregulated bankers accountable for the global economic meltdown.
Robert Scheer
-
Our Eroding Dollar
No matter how much it adds to inflation, the Fed, prodded by Wall Street, is poised to again lower interest rates–punching an even bigger hole in our purchasing power.
Nicholas von Hoffman
-
The Weepy Witch & the Secret Muslim
If the campaign becomes a competition between race and gender, the winner will be whichever white man the GOP nominates.
Katha Pollitt
-
Moody’s: The Terrorist at Ground Zero
Lusting after pools of Social Security and Medicare money, the Wall Street giant aims to dictate national policy through the barrel of a financial gun.
Alexander Cockburn
-
-
-
Books & the Arts
A Conversation with Taylor Branch
MLK’s biographer on presidents, politics, racial injustice, poverty and war.
Bruce Wallace
-
-
L.A.
Politically speaking
look at this
a word at a time
on my knee
looking forward to a picnic
with my friends
in the afternoon
in their carEileen Myles
-
On the Books
A “rogue sociologist” gains unprecedented insight on the day-to-day workings of a Chicago gang.
Ted Conover
-
Little Ships of Horror
Marcus Rediker’s breathtaking “human history” of the slave ship reveals how the transatlantic slave trade demeaned everyone it touched.
Christopher Leslie Brown
-
The stakes are higher now than ever. Get The Nation in your inbox.
-
Letters
Letters
Readers respond to Gary Younge on The Obama Effect, exchange views with Henry Siegman on Israel and comment about the subprime mortgage meltdown.
Our Readers and Henry Siegman