Articles

Democracy’s Dilemmas Democracy’s Dilemmas

In what is being called the "cedar revolution," demonstrators in Beirut brought down the pro-Syrian government at the end of February and forced Damascus to announce the withdr...

Mar 10, 2005 / The Editors

Can Democracy Survive Bush’s Embrace? Can Democracy Survive Bush’s Embrace?

It started off as a joke and has now become vaguely serious: the idea that Bono might be named president of the World Bank.

Mar 10, 2005 / Column / Naomi Klein

Anti-Semite? Self-Hating Jew? Moi? Anti-Semite? Self-Hating Jew? Moi?

That the Boston Globe is a great newspaper can be in no doubt, as its brave (though flawed) reporting on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church has recently demonstrated.

Mar 10, 2005 / Column / Eric Alterman

Grim Fairy Tales Grim Fairy Tales

It seemed too bizarre to be anything but apocryphal, but, hey, I heard it on NPR: William Poole, a high school junior from Kentucky, was taken into custody and charged with threa...

Mar 10, 2005 / Column / Patricia J. Williams

GIs Against Torture GIs Against Torture

Low-ranking soldiers are taking the blame in the torture scandal while higher-ups get a pass.

Mar 9, 2005 / Feature / John Sifton

Letter From Spain Letter From Spain

The barricades went up in Salamanca on December 30.

Mar 9, 2005 / Feature / Geoff Pingree and Lisa Abend

Race to the Bottom Race to the Bottom

Wal-Mart hopes to defeat its opponents by exploiting their racial divisions.

Mar 9, 2005 / Feature / Liza Featherstone

The New Face of Protest? The New Face of Protest?

Antiwar activists cultivate military allies.

Mar 9, 2005 / Feature / Karen Houppert

Letters Letters

CHUNNEL VISION Washington, DC

Mar 9, 2005 / Our Readers

Fear and Loathing in Italy Fear and Loathing in Italy

Nineteen sixty-eight came early to Italy--it began with student protests at the University of Trento in 1967--and lasted longer, arguably, than anywhere else.

Mar 9, 2005 / Books & the Arts / Frederika Randall

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