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October 29, 2007
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Feature
Does the ‘T’ Stand Alone?
As a gay rights bill moved through Congress, some prominent Democrats tried to exclude protections for transgenders. The LGBT community revolted.
Christopher Lisotta
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Questions for Michael Mukasey
Elizabeth Holtzman, Nan Aron, Stephen Gillers, Victor Navasky and others quiz the Attorney General nominee on torture, the Constitution and the fate of Alberto Gonzales.
The Nation
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A New Latino Agenda
Latino voters will go to the polls in 2008 with a hemispheric vision, a new sense of power and concerned about Iraq, immigration and the environment.
Roberto Lovato
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Watada’s Double Jeopardy
A legal drama is unfolding in Washington State over whether an Army officer who refuses to serve in Iraq has the same Constitutional rights as the rest of us.
Jeremy Brecher and Brendan Smith
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Which Climate Bill on Capitol Hill?
As scenarios on the impact of global warming worsen, Senate Democrats are poised to abandon a realistic bill and support a deeply flawed measure that doesn’t solve the problem.
Mark Hertsgaard
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Iraqis Sue Blackwater for Baghdad Killings
Blackwater USA now faces wrongful death suits in US court brought by survivors of three Iraqi civilians killed in the September 16 Baghdad shootings.
Jeremy Scahill
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Rudy’s Bird of Prey
Giuliani’s conservative kingmaker knows all about the ugly side of Third World debt. He invented it.
Ari Berman
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Rudy’s Dirty Money
A closer look at the Texas energy interests fueling the former New York mayor’s presidential campaign.
Ari Berman
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Editorial
Latina America Lavishly Comes of Age
The quinceañera has become a rite of passage for even the poorest Latina teens, another example of our most treasured rites debased at the cash register.
Lakshmi Chaudhry
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The New American Imperium
The Democrats appear to be anti-Iraq War. But they surely are not acting like opponents of imperial overreach.
Stanley I. Kutler
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Malcolm Suber: Good for New Orleans
A longtime activist, running in a special City Council election, is just what New Orleans needs.
Adolph Reed Jr.
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With Friends Like Turkey…
As Turkey ramps up its outrage against a House committee vote to affirm the Armenian genocide, is anyone applauding our lawmakers’ act of moral courage?
Nicole Vartanian
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The Political Doris Lessing
The winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature is every bit as political as her predecessors.
Dan Kellum
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Her McGovern Moment
Hillary Clinton has recognized the value of courting antiwar voters.
John Nichols
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Iraq: The Other Surge
Across the political spectrum in Iraq, a nationalistic bloc is emerging to challenge the Kurdish and Shiite separatists who have held sway under US tutelage.
Bob Dreyfuss
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Noted.
Giuliani in Philadelphia, an obituary for Haldar Abdel-Shafi, an apology from Jon Stewart and more.
The Editors
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The China Syndrome
Worried about toxic toys from China? Worry, too, about Chinese workers exposed to the poisons.
Andrew Ross
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Pre-empt Preventive War
The path back to sanity begins by repealing the Kyl-Lieberman amendment and prohibiting military action in Iran without Congressional approval.
The Editors
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Column
Sick Kids’ Laugh Riot
Dear Congressional Democrats: Here’s a funny story about what it’s like to have a really sick kid, even if you do have insurance.
Annabelle Gurwitch
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The Fall of Marion Jones, Inc.
The sports establishment is shocked, shocked at her steroid-fueled Olympic wins. But didn’t they also play a role?
Dave Zirin
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Whose Genocide Counts?
The House Foreign Affairs Committee bravely declares the 1915 slaughter of Armenians in Turkey genocide. Why not put the same label on themselves, for their role in the Iraq catastrophe?
Nicholas von Hoffman
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Burns’s War: What Is It Good For?
An increasingly bookless universe has become the wasteland so many have feared. In a perfect world, we’d have more Ken Burnses expressing a multiplicity of views.
Eric Alterman
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Strange Culture
If the stuff of life is corporatized, does art about it become a form of interference in business?
Patricia J. Williams
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On Larry Craig’s Decision to Serve Out His Term in the Senate
The GOP learns a thing or two about what it means to be gay.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
Latina America Lavishly Comes of Age
The quinceañera has become a rite of passage for even the poorest Latina teens, another example of our most treasured rites debased at the cash register.
Lakshmi Chaudhry
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Terry McMillan vs. Ghetto Lit
Driven by a tabloid episode from her own marriage, the novelist joins the debate over the mass marketing of trashy books to young black readers.
Amy Alexander
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What’s Radiohead Worth?
The British rockers stick a fork in the recording industry by offering downloads of a new album for whatever fans want to pay. Oh, the anguish.
Peter C. Baker
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Apocalypse Now?
According to Chalmers Johnson, Bush’s imperial presidency may be the final chapter in the collapse of American democracy.
Stephen Holmes
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Sound Check
The history of twentieth-century music charts the rise of modern masters like Duke Ellington and John Adams.
David Schiff
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Burns’s War: What Is It Good For?
An increasingly bookless universe has become the wasteland so many have feared. In a perfect world, we’d have more Ken Burnses expressing a multiplicity of views.
Eric Alterman
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Strange Culture
If the stuff of life is corporatized, does art about it become a form of interference in business?
Patricia J. Williams
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Letters
Letters
Readers pick a few nits about Katha Pollitt’s column on poverty and heap praise on Bob Moser’s reporting about the “Ditch Mitch” McConnell movement in Kentucky.
Our Readers