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January 30, 2006
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Feature
Bachelet’s Big Win
Michelle Bachelet’s election as Chile’s first female president represents many things for her fellow citizens: the certainty of political continuity, the possibility of change and a commitment to the past.
Laila Weir
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Monetary Zombies
We’re on our way to being a society of economic zombies, half dead and half alive, buried in debt but prevented by credit card companies from declaring bankruptcy.
Nicholas von Hoffman
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Confirmation and Crisis
If the Alito confirmation hearings were a test of Democratic strategy, the Alito vote to come is a test of moderate Republican integrity and mettle.
Bruce Shapiro
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Unequipped to Cure
Vaccine production in the United States is in an alarming condition–with drug-makers wedded to outmoded techniques and government more focused on terror than pandemics.
Dr. Marc Siegel
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Everyone’s a Reformer
For a long time on Capitol Hill, no one was interested in lobbying reform. Now everybody wants to get in on the act.
Ari Berman
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Adrift in Egypt
A brutal raid on an encampment of refugees in Cairo has focused the world’s attention on the netherworld Sudanese occupy in Egypt.
Negar Azimi
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Compromised and Corrupted
Samuel Alito and his handlers have crafted a disingenuous campaign that reeks of ethical compromise, bending Senate rules, bending the truth and compromising the confirmation process.
Bruce Shapiro
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Right-Wing Revelation
Samuel Alito’s blunt testimony on international law revealed the extremity of his judicial philosophy and carried profound implications for rulings he might make.
Bruce Shapiro
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Working-Class Hero
While the edges continue to be smoothed off Martin Luther King Jr.’s bracing challenges to racism, war and free-market exploitation, the holiday is a time to remember a leader who believed civil rights and labor rights are tightly intertwined.
William P. Jones
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Green Power
The Green Party fell from power in recent German elections, but Greens continue to be the party to watch, a progressive influence on the world’s third-largest economy.
Mark Hertsgaard
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Part D From Outer Space
The Bush Administration’s ill-advised new prescription drug program could destroy Medicare as a benefit for all Americans.
Trudy Lieberman
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The Impeachment of George W. Bush
The time has come to call for the impeachment of President Bush. Any President who maintains he is above the law–and acts repeatedly on that belief–seriously endangers our consitutional system of government.
Elizabeth Holtzman
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Editorial
In Fact…
Remembering Frank Wilkinson, American hero; full disclosure on Jack Abramoff; Dave Letterman confronts Bill O’Reilly; a new baby for Nation contributing editors Liza Featherstone and Doug Henwood.
The Editors
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Palestinian Dilemmas
Will Palestinians be compelled to live by Ariel Sharon’s repressive vision or will they compel Israel to accept genuine self-determination for the Palestinian people?
Mouin Rabbani
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Israel After Sharon
Suddenly, the Sharon era is over. And Sharon’s centrist Kadima Party may emerge as the dominant force after the March 28 elections.
Hillel Schenker
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Newt’s New Con
No voice rings as hollow as Newt Gingrich’s on the GOP culture of corruption. Incredibly, the media are swallowing his story.
David Sirota
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Kickback Mountain
Cleaning up Congress after the Abramoff scandal involves far more than limits on gifts and perks. It requires barring the ‘legalized bribery’ of major campaign contributions.
The Editors
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Column
Meanwhile, Back in Afghanistan
It’s appalingly clear Team Bush is unwilling to do the hard work it takes to make Afghanistan the functioning nation it was before cold war games tore it apart.
Robert Scheer
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Girls Against Boys?
Women now outnumber men at colleges and universities, but higher education has not become the fluffy pink playpen of feminism that some conservatives envision.
Katha Pollitt
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The FBI and Edward Said
The FBI was probably tapping Edward Said’s phone right up until the day he died. Details are emerging of a surveillance effort that extended for nearly thirty years.
Alexander Cockburn
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A Member of Congress Tries to Recall Jack Abramoff
Testing a Congressman’s memory of the former super-lobbyist: Good old what’s-his-name…but me? I hardly knew him.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
Cruel and Unusual Punishment
Michael Haneke’s Caché is a stylish thriller that scrapes away at the surface of polite European affluence to lay bare the moral rot beneath.
Stuart Klawans
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In Her Mind’s Eye
Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism is a political classic trapped in the era in which it was written.
Jonathan Rée
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Easier Said Than Done
Kwame Anthony Appiah’s Cosmopolitanism explores the middle ground between the universal laws of liberalism and relativism’s blind respect for all differences.
John Gray
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Working-Class Hero
While the edges continue to be smoothed off Martin Luther King Jr.’s bracing challenges to racism, war and free-market exploitation, the holiday is a time to remember a leader who believed civil rights and labor rights are tightly intertwined.
William P. Jones
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Letters