Print Magazine April 8, 2019, Issue Cover art by: Jaz Malone Purchase Current Issue or Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial Should I Out This Rapist? Another reader asks if wearing a sparkly ring makes her look “tone deaf” in a world where people are struggling. Liza Featherstone White Supremacy in Australia Set the Stage for the Christchurch Massacre The mainstreaming of hate has become routine, in both the media and politics. Antony Loewenstein Jacinda of New Zealand vs. Trump ignore this… Read More Jen Sorensen Trump’s Budget Is a Bitter Betrayal The only question is how long the president can get away with this con. Katrina vanden Heuvel Column Brexit Has Made the UK a Laughingstock The British political class is in crisis. Gary Younge The Admissions Scandal Is About Parental Narcissism—and the Schools’ Complicity This is what college looks like for entitled parents who don’t care about education, and whose children don’t care either. Katha Pollitt The College-Admissions Scandal Calvin Trillin Letters Letters From the April 8, 2019, Issue A question for “The Blob”… Generation climate strike… Endgame… Our Readers Feature Making Nuclear Weapons Menacing Again The Pentagon plan to overhaul the US nuclear arsenal is as costly as it is dangerous. Michael T. Klare How a Series of Jail Rebellions Rocked New York—and Woke a City It has been nearly 50 years since New York’s jails erupted in protest, but the lessons of that era feel more relevant than ever. Heather Ann Thompson Meet Mississippi’s Fiercest Advocate for Reproductive Justice Laurie Bertram Roberts set out to help women get abortions in the country’s most restrictive state. So why is her house filled with diapers? Rebecca Grant Books & the Arts Europe’s Twin Specters of Fear Paul Hanebrink’s new book tracks the entwined history of European anti-Semitism and anticommunism. James Chappel The Past and Future of the American Strike A new book tells the history of America through its workplace struggles. Rich Yeselson They Brought Her In Lauren K. Watel Folk Music That Bends Time and Space The songs on Jessica Pratt’s new album Quiet Signs seem to exist in a tranquil place just outside reality. Olivia Horn Recent Issues See All "swipe left below to view more recent issues"Swipe → November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 See All x
Should I Out This Rapist? Another reader asks if wearing a sparkly ring makes her look “tone deaf” in a world where people are struggling. Liza Featherstone
White Supremacy in Australia Set the Stage for the Christchurch Massacre The mainstreaming of hate has become routine, in both the media and politics. Antony Loewenstein
Trump’s Budget Is a Bitter Betrayal The only question is how long the president can get away with this con. Katrina vanden Heuvel
The Admissions Scandal Is About Parental Narcissism—and the Schools’ Complicity This is what college looks like for entitled parents who don’t care about education, and whose children don’t care either. Katha Pollitt
Letters From the April 8, 2019, Issue A question for “The Blob”… Generation climate strike… Endgame… Our Readers
Making Nuclear Weapons Menacing Again The Pentagon plan to overhaul the US nuclear arsenal is as costly as it is dangerous. Michael T. Klare
How a Series of Jail Rebellions Rocked New York—and Woke a City It has been nearly 50 years since New York’s jails erupted in protest, but the lessons of that era feel more relevant than ever. Heather Ann Thompson
Meet Mississippi’s Fiercest Advocate for Reproductive Justice Laurie Bertram Roberts set out to help women get abortions in the country’s most restrictive state. So why is her house filled with diapers? Rebecca Grant
Europe’s Twin Specters of Fear Paul Hanebrink’s new book tracks the entwined history of European anti-Semitism and anticommunism. James Chappel
The Past and Future of the American Strike A new book tells the history of America through its workplace struggles. Rich Yeselson
Folk Music That Bends Time and Space The songs on Jessica Pratt’s new album Quiet Signs seem to exist in a tranquil place just outside reality. Olivia Horn