Print Magazine October 22, 2018, Issue Purchase Current Issue or Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial Americans Work Too Much Already The Save American Workers Act would do nothing of the sort, but it would force many employees to log more hours. Bryce Covert For Justice, Not Apartheid, in Palestine A quarter-century after Oslo, Israel is consolidating its domination—but the global resistance movement is growing. The Editors Eve of Battle ignore this… Read More Jen Sorensen The Reason Julia Salazar Won A core of true believers were the backbone of her campaign. How should they handle accounts of her dishonesty? Annie Shields Column A Small Nation That Thinks It’s a World Power Brexit emerged from its supporters’ nostalgia for a supposedly glorious past. Gary Younge Reasons to Believe 10 ways to respond to Brett Kavanaugh’s defenders. Patricia J. Williams Trump on Reporting a Sexual Assault Calvin Trillin Letters Letters From the October 22, 2018, Issue Lessons From and for AOC Thank you for an excellent cover story, “The AOC Effect,” about the Democratic Party’s new rock star, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez [Sept. 10/17]. Although I am… Read More Our Readers Feature Is the World Bank Group Above the Law? A fishing community in India challenges the bank’s private-lending arm in the US Supreme Court. Barry Yeoman The Body in Poverty The decline of America’s rural health system and its toll on my family. Sarah Smarsh Jeremy Corbyn and the Crisis of Anti-Semitism A vicious feud has engulfed the Labour Party—why can’t its leader defuse it? D.D. Guttenplan Books & the Arts Andrew Bujalski’s Strip-Mall Realism In Support the Girls, the filmmaker offers us warmhearted comedy about coping with the intolerable. Stuart Klawans The Odyssey of Seymour Hersh The legendary reporter and the ambiguities of investigative reporting. Michael Massing Rachel Cusk’s Struggle to Break Free In her Outline trilogy, the English novelist finds a freedom in art that she cannot locate in life. Maggie Doherty 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
Americans Work Too Much Already The Save American Workers Act would do nothing of the sort, but it would force many employees to log more hours. Bryce Covert
For Justice, Not Apartheid, in Palestine A quarter-century after Oslo, Israel is consolidating its domination—but the global resistance movement is growing. The Editors
The Reason Julia Salazar Won A core of true believers were the backbone of her campaign. How should they handle accounts of her dishonesty? Annie Shields
A Small Nation That Thinks It’s a World Power Brexit emerged from its supporters’ nostalgia for a supposedly glorious past. Gary Younge
Letters From the October 22, 2018, Issue Lessons From and for AOC Thank you for an excellent cover story, “The AOC Effect,” about the Democratic Party’s new rock star, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez [Sept. 10/17]. Although I am… Read More Our Readers
Is the World Bank Group Above the Law? A fishing community in India challenges the bank’s private-lending arm in the US Supreme Court. Barry Yeoman
The Body in Poverty The decline of America’s rural health system and its toll on my family. Sarah Smarsh
Jeremy Corbyn and the Crisis of Anti-Semitism A vicious feud has engulfed the Labour Party—why can’t its leader defuse it? D.D. Guttenplan
Andrew Bujalski’s Strip-Mall Realism In Support the Girls, the filmmaker offers us warmhearted comedy about coping with the intolerable. Stuart Klawans
The Odyssey of Seymour Hersh The legendary reporter and the ambiguities of investigative reporting. Michael Massing
Rachel Cusk’s Struggle to Break Free In her Outline trilogy, the English novelist finds a freedom in art that she cannot locate in life. Maggie Doherty