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March 27, 2006
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Feature
The Bolton Archipelago
John Bolton’s grandstanding vote today opposing the establishment of a UN Human Rights Council might please hard-core isolationists. But no one else.
Ian Williams
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Bloggers Join Fray on Political Ads
As the House considers two bills to regulate political speech on the Internet, the liberal Daily Kos and conservative Red State blogs are bedfellows, supporting a flawed GOP-sponsored bill that opens the door for soft money to buy political ads online.
Celia Viggo Wexler
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Typecast as a Terrorist
The detainment of two actors from The Road to Guantánamo reveals a legal apparatus that is no longer able to distinguish between real and invented threats.
Adam Federman
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Can You Say ‘Permanent Bases’?
Despite recent press visits, the building of bases in Iraq has not come under much scrutiny. If Congress and opposition Democrats continue to ignore the issue, there will be no withdrawal from Iraq.
Tom Engelhardt
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The Democrats: Still Ducking
Eight months ahead of the 2006 midterm vote, Democrats are either ignoring Iraq or supporting the war while criticizing Bush’s prosecution of it. But it’s not too late to mount a strong opposition.
Ari Berman
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Lap Dogs of the Press
During the run-up to the Iraq War, the nation’s leading print and broadcast media could have saved lives if they questioned the Administration’s pronouncements. Instead, they were an echo chamber for the White House.
Helen Thomas
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Afghanistan: The Other War
Despite Bush’s feel-good rhetoric, the United States has done little to help Afghanistan, leaving the impression of abandonment. Meanwhile, European troops work hard to build bridges to the locals.
Christian Parenti
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War Is Personal: Tomas Young/Age 26/Kansas City, Missouri
In the first installment of a new series called Photo Nation, a young soldier from Missouri recounts the ambush of his unit in Iraq.
Eugene Richards
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Editorial
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A Peculiar Politician
Senator Russell Feingold should be praised for calling on the Senate to censure the President for breaking the law and lying about his domestic spying program. Instead, he’s mocked by the media and abandoned by many of his own party.
William Greider
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Helping China’s Censors
The Global Online Freedom Act should be the beginning of a conversation about what needs to be done to prevent US Internet and technology firms from contradicting American values.
Rebecca MacKinnon
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Leaking Bubble
The US housing market has been responsible for about half the economy’s recent growth, but increasing dependence on home-equity credit could create a financial disaster.
Doug Henwood
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A Dragon Slayer Returns
Pete McCloskey, the first Republican member of Congress to call for Nixon’s impeachment and withdrawal from Vietnam, has resurfaced at 78 to challenge Richard Pombo and the Iraq War.
Mark Hertsgaard
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Bringing the War Home
The antiwar messages most likely to be heard and acted upon by Congressional Democrats and wavering Republicans will come from their hometowns, where a growing number of activists are organizing with an eye toward communicating to Congress.
John Nichols
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Three Years and Counting
The American public acknowledges the failure of US ground forces in Iraq. With civil war imminent, when will our “leaders” in Washington accept the same conclusion?
The Editors
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Column
A Whole New Ball Game
Major League Baseball owners may gripe, but the World Baseball Classic provides a glimpse of an alternative future for our national pastime.
Dave Zirin
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Improvised Explosive Delusions
As Bush continues to insist the US is bringing peace and freedom to Iraq, his latest plan to quell the insurgency spends billions more to stem the use of improvised explosive devices.
Robert Scheer
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Student Debts, Stunted Lives
As Congress jacks up the rates students and their parents are paying for college loans, the consequences are already being felt by young people whose ability to have a child or own a house is limited by debt.
Nicholas von Hoffman
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Democrats: When the War Was Lost
It’s no surprise to learn that oil companies are underpaying royalties for drilling on public land, or projecting profits in the billions. The battle for energy regulation was lost a long time ago.
Alexander Cockburn
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George Bush’s Approval Rating Sinks to 34 Percent
Bush’s low approval rating is irrelevant, considering who is still on his side.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
Typecast as a Terrorist
The detainment of two actors from The Road to Guantánamo reveals a legal apparatus that is no longer able to distinguish between real and invented threats.
Adam Federman
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Consuming Desires
Thank You for Smoking praises the professional hucksters of the cigarette companies, and Duck Season is a road movie in which the scenery doesn’t change.
Stuart Klawans
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Unborn in the USA
In his captivating new book Absolute Convictions, Eyal Press explores the links between his hometown’s post-Vietnam decline and its emergence as a battlefield in the national crusade against abortion.
Mark Sorkin
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The Dream Life
In The Power of Movies, Colin McGinn asserts that films are the medium best suited to imitate the workings of the dreaming mind.
Gilberto Perez
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The Great Black Hope
Taylor Branch concludes his staggering trilogy of the civil rights era with At Canaan’s Edge, a relentlessly detailed narrative of Martin Luther King’s desperate struggle to save the movement.
Gerald Early
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