Print Magazine October 14, 2019, Issue Cover art by: Nathaniel Wilder (photo) Login to Download the PDF of this Issue Download the PDF of this Issue Editorial The Climate Movement Breaks Through Translating urgency into political action is the next task of the climate movement—and a more difficult one. Zoë Carpenter We Don’t Have to Choose Between Warren and Sanders Yet Their truce during the 2020 campaigns is widening the left lane—that’s good for everyone. D.D. Guttenplan Do I Need Diversity in Every Issue of My Magazine? And a male teenager asks how about the line between “normal thoughts of sex and objectification.” Liza Featherstone Column Trump Says Ukraine Call Was ‘Perfectly Fine and Routine’ Calvin Trillin Stop Getting Married on Plantations Monuments to slavery won’t lose their romantic allure until Americans understand the horrors of their own history. Patricia J. Williams Making Sense of Trump’s Rise Three new books try to explain how we got such a massive jerk in the White House. Eric Alterman Letters Letters From the October 14, 2019, Issue Unrecognized labor… Taking offense… Hope amid troubles… Our Readers Feature The Strange, Uncertain Fate of One of the World’s Most Valuable Salmon Habitats Alaska’s Bristol Bay is a rare pristine salmon fishery. Can it survive a rapidly changing climate—and a massive, Trump-backed mine? Julia O’Malley HUD Is Planning a Bureaucratic Pogrom Against Public Housing Tenants Under proposed new rules, if a single member of a family is undocumented, the entire family can be evicted. Sasha Abramsky The Unmet Promises of a New Orleans Charter School In 2012 almost all of Sci Academy’s seniors were heading to college. Seven years later, only 18 percent had graduated. Casey Parks Books & the Arts Is Our Food Culture Killing Us? How we “choose” what to eat takes place within a contained food environment shaped by availability and advertising, traditions and trends—and, above all else, economics. Susan Pedersen Kamel Daoud and the Paradoxes of Liberation In a new collection of his political writings, the Algerian novelist contemplates the unfinished business of his country’s struggle for independence. Robyn Creswell Bon Iver’s Great Escape What began as a solo folk act has swelled into a collaborative and ecstatic mix of rock, pop, gospel, and more. Marcus J. Moore 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
The Climate Movement Breaks Through Translating urgency into political action is the next task of the climate movement—and a more difficult one. Zoë Carpenter
We Don’t Have to Choose Between Warren and Sanders Yet Their truce during the 2020 campaigns is widening the left lane—that’s good for everyone. D.D. Guttenplan
Do I Need Diversity in Every Issue of My Magazine? And a male teenager asks how about the line between “normal thoughts of sex and objectification.” Liza Featherstone
Stop Getting Married on Plantations Monuments to slavery won’t lose their romantic allure until Americans understand the horrors of their own history. Patricia J. Williams
Making Sense of Trump’s Rise Three new books try to explain how we got such a massive jerk in the White House. Eric Alterman
Letters From the October 14, 2019, Issue Unrecognized labor… Taking offense… Hope amid troubles… Our Readers
The Strange, Uncertain Fate of One of the World’s Most Valuable Salmon Habitats Alaska’s Bristol Bay is a rare pristine salmon fishery. Can it survive a rapidly changing climate—and a massive, Trump-backed mine? Julia O’Malley
HUD Is Planning a Bureaucratic Pogrom Against Public Housing Tenants Under proposed new rules, if a single member of a family is undocumented, the entire family can be evicted. Sasha Abramsky
The Unmet Promises of a New Orleans Charter School In 2012 almost all of Sci Academy’s seniors were heading to college. Seven years later, only 18 percent had graduated. Casey Parks
Is Our Food Culture Killing Us? How we “choose” what to eat takes place within a contained food environment shaped by availability and advertising, traditions and trends—and, above all else, economics. Susan Pedersen
Kamel Daoud and the Paradoxes of Liberation In a new collection of his political writings, the Algerian novelist contemplates the unfinished business of his country’s struggle for independence. Robyn Creswell
Bon Iver’s Great Escape What began as a solo folk act has swelled into a collaborative and ecstatic mix of rock, pop, gospel, and more. Marcus J. Moore