Articles

The Days of May The Days of May

What date shall I assign to Chris Marker's magnum opus, A Grin Without a Cat? This rugged oak of an essay-film, whose gnarls trace the growth and withering of decades of leftis...

Apr 25, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Le Pen: The Center Folds Le Pen: The Center Folds

Earthquake. Cataclysm. Electroshock. The 9/11 of French politics. These were the recurring terms that established political leaders of both left and right used to characterize ...

Apr 25, 2002 / Doug Ireland

Single Standards Single Standards

Nothing is more to be despised, in a time of crisis, than the affectation of "evenhandedness." But there are two very nasty delusions and euphemisms gaining ground at pre...

Apr 25, 2002 / Column / Christopher Hitchens

The Enron Nine The Enron Nine

Some prestigious Wall Street firms may have been involved in a Ponzi scheme.

Apr 25, 2002 / Feature / William Greider

Strange Marchfellows Strange Marchfellows

The numbers and diversity of the April 20 protests in Washington represented a giant step forward for the antiwar movement. The weekend's events dealt a lethal blow to the notion-...

Apr 25, 2002 / Liza Featherstone

Unmaking of the President Unmaking of the President

The ineffable good luck of George W. Bush seems to be faltering at last. The man became President by an electoral accident that resembled theft. His stock was sinking, his agenda ...

Apr 25, 2002 / The Editors

History in a Blur History in a Blur

It seems scarcely to have required a great philosophical mind to come up with the observation that each of us is the child of our times, but that thought must have been receive...

Apr 25, 2002 / Books & the Arts / Arthur C. Danto

Searching for “Moral Clarity” Searching for “Moral Clarity”

If the rightwing had actual cheerleaders, they would be chanting, "What do we want? Moral clarity! When do we want it? Now." In recent weeks, "moral clarity...

Apr 23, 2002 / David Corn

Breaking the ‘Consensus’ Breaking the ‘Consensus’

On the morning of April 20, in the nation's capital, activists held two anti-war rallies, each of which drew thousands, almost within sight of one another.

Apr 22, 2002 / Feature / Liza Featherstone

Seventy-Five Thousand Protest in Washington Seventy-Five Thousand Protest in Washington

"I think the movement is beginning to wake up," Valerie Mullen, an 80-year-old anti-war activist from Vermont, exclaimed as she surveyed the swelling crowd of people protesting ag...

Apr 21, 2002 / John Nichols

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