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October 2, 2006
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Feature
The Real Crisis in Uganda
The cease-fire between Uganda and the Lord’s Resistance Army is only a first step in resolving the humanitarian crisis. The West must push for the release of 2 million Acholis still languishing in government camps.
Salim Lone
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Life After Net Neutrality: Replaced By a Chimp?
If Senator Ted Stevens defies mounting public opposition and succeeds in killing net neutrality, expect the free flow of online content to be replaced by lowbrow corporate infotainment.
Jeffrey Chester
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Torture and the Content of our Character
The standoff between the Senate and the Bush Administration over military tribunals, torture and war crimes tests core legal and moral issues and will determine the kind of country America wishes to be.
Jeremy Brecher and Brendan Smith
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China’s Neoliberal Dynasty
As China’s economy surges forward, so does the pileup of social contradictions: pollution, migration, crime and family dysfunction.
Peter Kwong
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Congo Journey
It was the strangest journey of my life, and it will always be. I was looking for fictional characters I had invented, in a country I had never visited.
John le Carré
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What Can Sherrod Brown Do for the Democrats?
The road to the Democrats’ renewal runs through Ohio, and Sherrod Brown is on it, looking for the towns his party forgot and the voters who got away.
John Nichols
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Editorial
Bush’s Selective Perception
President Bush’s address to the UN General Assembly was less disdainful than earlier speeches, but it shined a light on the President’s willful blindness to the complexity of the problems facing the Mideast and the world.
Ian Williams
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The UN After Lebanon
The UN’s mixed record on the war in Lebanon proves we should lower our expectations of what it can meaningfully achieve.
Richard Falk
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CA Leads on Climate
California’s global warming initiative shows how far ahead the state is compared with the federal government. But it also reveals how America lags behind the rest of the world.
Mark Hertsgaard
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No Clear Antiwar Signal
Anyone looking for a signal from the primaries that Democrats will be a clear antiwar party didn’t get it.
John Nichols
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A Scandal If Not a Crime
The White House behaved unethically by exposing Valerie Plame’s identity. Escaping prosecution is not the same as escaping judgment.
The Editors
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Lawless ‘Compromises’
Prime midyear election issues: Torture and eavesdropping are illegal. We are a nation founded on the rule of law.
The Editors
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Column
Render Unto Syria
Will anyone in the somnambulant White House press corps dare ask the President why he would “render” a Canadian to Syria to be tortured and imprisoned without charges?
Robert Scheer
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Sneakers for Social Justice?
New York Knicks point guard Stephon Marbury is getting props with a $14.98 sneaker designed to appeal to low-income kids. But the criticism he’s endured over sweatshop labor shows it’s hard to do good.
Dave Zirin
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Lying About 9/11? Easy as ABC
Why did the network humiliate its news division, ignore historians and insult Americans with a 9/11 docudrama that it knew was a tissue of lies?
Eric Alterman
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A Klatch of Civilizations
As Survivor races to the bottom by dividing this season’s contenders into race-based tribes, perhaps we can look to Starbucks for new models of how to blend in.
Patricia J. Williams
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George Bush Explains His Policy on Torture To Someone Who Is Being Waterboarded
Don’t worry–it only feels like you’re drowning.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
Short Takes
Reviews of Half of a Yellow Sun, St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves and The City Is a Rising Tide.
Fatin Abbas and Christine Smallwood
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As If I Had Become Happy
As if I had become happy: I went back. I pressed
the doorbell more than once, and waited…
(perhaps I am late. No one is opening the door, not
a groan in the hallway).Mahmoud Darwish
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Unnatural Disaster
Three new books reappraise the massive earthquake of 1906, which was felt across an area of 400,000 miles and leveled much of San Francisco.
Ari Kelman
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The Lives They Led
Claire Messud’s The Emperor’s Children is a superb comedy of manners, a richly tragicomic view of three thirtysomething Ivy Leaguers in the days leading up to 9/11.
Kate Levin
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The Illusionist
Alexander Stille’s The Sack of Rome explores how Silvio Berlusconi subverted Italy’s government, history and culture.
Tobias Jones
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Music of My Mind
John Gennari’s Blowin’ Hot and Cool looks at the intimate but fractious relationship between jazz luminaries and their critics.
David Yaffe
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Lying About 9/11? Easy as ABC
Why did the network humiliate its news division, ignore historians and insult Americans with a 9/11 docudrama that it knew was a tissue of lies?
Eric Alterman
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A Klatch of Civilizations
As Survivor races to the bottom by dividing this season’s contenders into race-based tribes, perhaps we can look to Starbucks for new models of how to blend in.
Patricia J. Williams
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Letters