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September 25, 2006
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Feature
Bush’s Sitcom Nominee
Warren Bell honed his reputation writing sitcoms and lobbing politically incorrect bombs for National Review Online. Now he’s Bush’s nominee for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s board of directors.
Celia Viggo Wexler
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ABC 9/11 Docudrama’s Right-Wing Roots
How conservative zealot David Horowitz produced and promoted ABC’s flawed docudrama, The Path to 9/11.
Max Blumenthal
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Chaos and Fear Stalk Afghanistan on 9/11 Anniversary
As Taliban fighters clash with thinly spread NATO forces across Afghanistan and “suicide cell” claims lives daily in Kabul, hope is fading that the country can avoid descending into chaos.
Christian Parenti
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Gaping Holes Remain in the 9/11 Story
It’s no wonder so many Americans are examining alternative explanations that range from the plausible to the absurd.
Robert Scheer
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Politics, the Media and 9/11
Since September 11, the Bush Administration has repeatedly exploited the threat of terrorism for political ends, from dirty bombs to sleeper cells to electoral politics.
Eric Boehlert
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Cashing In on Catastrophe
Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani is now using his public image, burnished by 9/11, to conceal crooked business deals and reap handsome profits from a national tragedy.
Wayne Barrett and Dan Collins
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A Light in Brooklyn
In Brooklyn, a beleaguered Arab-American community copes with bigotry and heightened government scrutiny post-9/11.
Moustafa Bayoumi
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Arab America’s September 11
Arab Americans are experiencing something similar to McCarthy-era redbaiting, but the cold war performed better on racial justice than Bush’s “war on terror.”
Moustafa Bayoumi
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9/11 in a Movie-Made World
What if the Twin Towers hadn’t collapsed? Would the Bush Administration have so easily advanced its fear-inspired “war on terror” without the images that played on a culture’s secret fears?
Tom Engelhardt
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Editorial
A Passion for Pluto
Pluto’s demotion from a planet to a dwarf isn’t the work of mean-spirited Grinches. It is a necessary part of the same process that got Pluto discovered in the first place.
Marla Geha
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The Real Tragedy
Five years after the attack, Americans are impatient and angry about what has been done in their name. Our national tragedy is not September 11 but the war in Iraq, an agony that promises to go on for years.
Eric Weinberger
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A Just Response
The most effective response to terrorism involves nonmilitary actions in cooperation with the global community and within a framework of domestic and international law.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
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Plame’s Role at the CIA
Valerie Plame was no CIA paper-pusher. She was searching out intelligence on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.
David Corn
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Knock on Wood
The Bush Administration’s illegitimate use of renditions, disappearances, torture and an illegal war has fostered the growth of a loose-knit global band of fanatics willing to do unspeakable violence against us.
David Cole
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The Path From 9/11
The fifth anniversary of 9/11 prompts grief and sadness, but also anger. We must free ourselves from the idea that the “war on terror” is an organizing principle for our foreign policy.
The Editors
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Column
Failing the Test
President Bush was correct when he said that not since the cold war has the nation been so tested. But the test lies not in the terror threat but in his Administration’s incompetence.
Robert Scheer
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Islamo-Fascism–Take Two
If we really want to understand the Muslim world, we should start by acknowledging that today’s “fascists” were yesterday’s freedom fighters.
Katha Pollitt
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The 9/11 Conspiracy Nuts
August Bebel once called anti-Semitism the socialism of fools. These days, the 9/11 conspiracy fever is fast becoming the "socialism" of the left.
Alexander Cockburn
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George Bush’s Pledge to the People of New Orleans on the Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
The President gives us a lesson in drive-by personal diplomacy.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
Stargazer
Andy Warhol’s eye for significant banality transformed the familiar into art. Ric Burns’s new American Masters documentary traces the roots of Warhol’s smirking genius.
Arthur C. Danto
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Bush’s Sitcom Nominee
Warren Bell honed his reputation writing sitcoms and lobbing politically incorrect bombs for National Review Online. Now he’s Bush’s nominee for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s board of directors.
Celia Viggo Wexler
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ABC 9/11 Docudrama’s Right-Wing Roots
How conservative zealot David Horowitz produced and promoted ABC’s flawed docudrama, The Path to 9/11.
Max Blumenthal
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Big in Japan
Reviews of Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles, Hollywoodland and This Film Is Not Yet Rated.
Stuart Klawans
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Unsentimental Education
A new memoir by Robert Hughes reveals the idiosyncratic sensibility of a celebrated art critic.
Christopher Hitchens
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Londonistan Calling
Gautam Malkani’s new novel explores the cross-section of youth culture, heritage and identity in London’s polyglot, postcolonial neighborhoods.
Gary Younge
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Ottoman Ghosts
Caroline Finkel’s new book, Osman’s Dream, explores the rise and calamitous fall of the Ottoman Empire.
Daniel Lazare
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Letters