Free Teaching Guide
November 5, 2007
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
If Gore Were Arrested…
As carbon emissions raise the planetary temperature, environmental activists are asking Nobel laureate Al Gore to engage in civil disobedience protesting construction of coal-fired power plants. He hasn't said no.
Mark Hertsgaard
-
A Whistleblower’s Tale
Republican lawyer Jill Simpson was the absent star of Tuesday’s House Judiciary Committee hearing on selective prosecution.
Glynn Wilson
-
Sudan’s ‘Lost Boys’ Return Home
Three young men who fled the fighting in South Sudan as children return home to find what’s left of their families and do what they can to help.
Jen Marlowe
-
Killing Time
After years of performing executions at a pace that scares the bejesus out of the civilized world, Texas has put the brakes on its machine as the Supreme Court considers lethal injection.
Mary Mapes
-
Dodd Refuses to Cave on Domestic Spying
As his fellow Democrats rush to pass the President’s intelligence bill, Christopher Dodd stands his ground.
Ari Melber
-
The New GOP Means Business
Forget Values Voters. With Bushism discredited and mainstream Republicans looking for candidates with business savvy and competence, Democrats may be facing far more formidable foes than they imagined.
Bob Moser
-
Al Franken Seeks the Wellstone Seat
Minnesota Senate candidate Al Franken has won wide support among voters–and conservatives are getting scared.
John Nichols
-
Father of History
Bettina Aptheker’s recent memoir has incited fierce debate over her father s legacy.
Christopher Phelps
-
Hillary’s Mystery Money Men
The men behind the money that made Bush now want to claim the Clinton campaign. Is someone cooking the books at Hillary Inc.?
Russ Baker and Adam Federman
-
Toxic Toys
As safety scandals dampen the public’s appetite for cheap imports, the European Union is raising doubts about standards and oversight in the US toy industry.
Mark Schapiro
-
Editorial
Whatever Happened to the Eight-Hour Day?
Americans spend more time on the job than workers in any other country. Isn’t it time presumably labor-friendly Democrats did something about it?
Steve Early and Suzanne Gordon
-
It’s Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week!
David Horowitz serves up a witch’s brew of Cheney-style anti-jihadism, mixed with anti-feminism and a sour dash of anti-Semitism.
Barbara Ehrenreich
-
Noted.
How Chevron fuels the Myanmar military, Blackwater’s legal woes and questions for Michael Mukasey.
The Nation
-
Ink-Stained Marx
A look at the cantankerous dispatches he wrote as London correspondent for the New York Tribune puts the father of communism in a new light.
James Ledbetter
-
-
Inconvenient Truth-Tellers
This year’s Nobel Peace Prize should spur governments and people everywhere to urgent action on climate change.
The Editors
-
GET UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS FOR LESS THAN $3 A MONTH!
-
Column
The Rockies Get Off Their Knees
As baseball’s most sanctimonious team heads to the World Series, the Colorado Rockies are playing down their holier-than-thou image.
Dave Zirin
-
With Facts on Our Side
Faced with a choice between facts and theology, antichoicers choose the latter every time.
Katha Pollitt
-
-
-
-
Books & the Arts
The Cinema of Terror
Three new films–Rendition, The Kingdom and Redacted–take on the clash of civilizations. How does the “war on terror” look on the big screen?
Christine Smallwood
-
Gracelands
The taint of an unjust war tarnishes the lives of Vietnam-era Americans in Denis Johnson’s stunning new novel.
Keith Gessen
-
Godzilla in Mexico
Listen carefully, my son: bombs were falling over Mexico City but no one even noticed. The air carried poison through the streets and open windows.
Roberto Bolaño
-
The Imperfectionist
Reconsidering the life and legacy of avant-garde artist and poet Francis Picabia.
Barry Schwabsky
-
Big Red Checkbook
America’s foreign-policy establishment is struggling to find an appropriate response to China’s soft power.
John Feffer
-
Father of History
Bettina Aptheker’s recent memoir has incited fierce debate over her father s legacy.
Christopher Phelps
-
Ink-Stained Marx
A look at the cantankerous dispatches he wrote as London correspondent for the New York Tribune puts the father of communism in a new light.
James Ledbetter
-
The stakes are higher now than ever. Get The Nation in your inbox.
-
Letters
Letters
Our readers weigh in on Marvin Kitman’s paean to Keith Olbermann and continue to react to “The Other War,” by Chris Hedges and Laila Al-Arian.
Our Readers