Print Magazine September 12-19, 2016, Issue Cover art by: Rick Wilson Purchase Current Issue or Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial Pundits, Decrying the Horrors of War in Aleppo, Demand Expanded War As with Iraq and Libya, these laptop bombardiers offer no clear plan for how to actually end the suffering of the Syrian people. Adam Johnson Is Julian Assange Exposing Innocent People to Persecution With Reckless Leaks? That’s the accusation from dissidents in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and elsewhere. Mark Hertsgaard This Is Why I Come to Work Every Day Even in the age of Trump, facts still can and do matter. Our work is to ferret them out and wield them as tools for reform. Kai Wright Column France Has a Strange Concept of Feminism—and Secularism Local bans on “burkinis” aren’t only wrong—they’re counterproductive. Katha Pollitt Trump Team Strategy? Calvin Trillin Letters Letters From the September 12-19, 2016, Issue Portrait of the artist as an old man… Yes, black lives matter… Not-so-neo-Nazism… Our Readers Feature Your Nationalism Can’t Contain Me I’ve held three passports and claimed many identities, all at once. I am the future of citizenship. Aminatta Forna Can War Reporting Be a Feminist Project? Women journalists can go to places where men are barred—and build their careers by exposing the lives of other women. Rafia Zakaria Is Angela Corey the Cruelest Prosecutor in America? The woman who failed to convict Trayvon Martin’s killer is putting hundreds of kids in prison, and dozens of people on death row. Jessica Pishko Books & the Arts Captivity Ange Mlinko Thomas Struth’s Post-Internet Art His pictures generate a perceptual confusion that might best represent where we stand with technology today. Barry Schwabsky Naming America’s Own Genocide In a commanding new book, Benjamin Madley calls California’s 19th-century elected officials “the primary architects of annihilation” against Native Americans in the state. Reading ... Richard White Recent Issues See All "swipe left below to view more recent issues"Swipe → December 2024 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 See All x
Pundits, Decrying the Horrors of War in Aleppo, Demand Expanded War As with Iraq and Libya, these laptop bombardiers offer no clear plan for how to actually end the suffering of the Syrian people. Adam Johnson
Is Julian Assange Exposing Innocent People to Persecution With Reckless Leaks? That’s the accusation from dissidents in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and elsewhere. Mark Hertsgaard
This Is Why I Come to Work Every Day Even in the age of Trump, facts still can and do matter. Our work is to ferret them out and wield them as tools for reform. Kai Wright
France Has a Strange Concept of Feminism—and Secularism Local bans on “burkinis” aren’t only wrong—they’re counterproductive. Katha Pollitt
Letters From the September 12-19, 2016, Issue Portrait of the artist as an old man… Yes, black lives matter… Not-so-neo-Nazism… Our Readers
Your Nationalism Can’t Contain Me I’ve held three passports and claimed many identities, all at once. I am the future of citizenship. Aminatta Forna
Can War Reporting Be a Feminist Project? Women journalists can go to places where men are barred—and build their careers by exposing the lives of other women. Rafia Zakaria
Is Angela Corey the Cruelest Prosecutor in America? The woman who failed to convict Trayvon Martin’s killer is putting hundreds of kids in prison, and dozens of people on death row. Jessica Pishko
Thomas Struth’s Post-Internet Art His pictures generate a perceptual confusion that might best represent where we stand with technology today. Barry Schwabsky
Naming America’s Own Genocide In a commanding new book, Benjamin Madley calls California’s 19th-century elected officials “the primary architects of annihilation” against Native Americans in the state. Reading ... Richard White