March 2, 2009
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Feature
Can a Green Economy Save a Drying Planet?
While we are busy addressing the economic meltdown, the worst droughts in history present a new, possibly bigger threat that there’s no clear roadmap for fixing.
Tom Engelhardt
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Can Green Jobs Be Good Jobs?
It felt like a dream a year ago, but a growing coalition of labor unions and environmentalists is putting real muscle into the idea that green jobs will help resolve the economic crisis.
Jeremy Brecher
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A World Without Water
Dr. Peter Gleick, founder and president of the Pacific Institute, weighs in on the severity and urgency of the global water crisis.
Tara Lohan
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WSF: Is Another World Possible?
At a time of economic, climatic and political crisis, advocates of social justice gathered for the annual World Social Forum to contemplate a new vision for a better world.
Tim Costello and Brendan Smith
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Under the Icelandic Volcano
How a cold country lost its shirt in the global economic meltdown, but ultimately found its soul.
Rebecca Solnit
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Your Valentine, Made in Prison
This Valentine’s Day you might want to steer clear of Victoria’s Secret, unless you like your lingerie made by prisoners.
Beth Schwartzapfel
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Britain’s Winter of Discontent
The global economic crisis hits Britain harder than any other developed country. Is it too big to fail?
D.D. Guttenplan
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Blue Dogs Bark
Why do the Blue Dog Democrats get so much attention? They’re more unified and cohesive than any other House faction. And then there’s America’s love affair with fiscal conservatism.
Chris Hayes
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Looting Social Security
Behind closed doors, advocates of entitlement reform are pushing Obama to tap the Social Security surplus to pay for bank bailouts. It could be a defining test for new politics in the Obama era.
William Greider
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Editorial
Tell The Nation
In big ways and small, the recession is having an impact on our daily lives. Help The Nation track the changes.
The Editors
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Labor’s Man Joins Treasury Team
Ron Bloom, a former I-banker with the head and heart of a labor activist, has been tapped to advise the Obama administration on the auto bailout. Let’s hope they listen to him.
William Greider
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William Greider Responds
William Greider defends his analysis of how Social Security is threatened by entitlement reformists.
William Greider
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The Peterson Foundation Responds
David M. Walker, president and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, responds to William Greider’s essay, Looting Wall Street, published in the March 2 edition of The Nation.
The Nation
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Obama Backslides on ‘State Secrets’
The president has shown a troubling unwillingness to acknowledge the wrongs the Bush administration committed.
David Cole
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Barney Frank: ‘Cut the Military Budget’
In a 2009 Nation editorial the Congressman passionately called for money for healthcare, not warfare.
Barney Frank
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Cut the Military Budget–I
Reining in the Pentagon’s wanton spending habits is going to be a long, hard slog.
Chris Hayes
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Noted.
Max Fraser on New York Wage Watch, Denise DiStephan on the Paycheck Fairness Act, John Nichols on Hilda Solis, Deborah Meier on teachers organizing
The Editors
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Pay-Cap Populism
Excessive executive pay endangers our public well-being as surely as any pollutants. Obama’s $500,000 pay cap is just a start at fixing the problem.
Sarah Anderson and Sam Pizzigati
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Bankrupt Bailout
Don’t exhaust the Treasury to keep insolvent financial giants alive. The government should liquidate failed banks, sell off their assets and let shareholders eat the dust.
The Editors
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Column
Good Money After Bad
Obama’s stimulus bill is far too modest to arrest an economy in free fall. But if it were up to the GOP, which largely created the mess, we’d be doing nothing at all.
Robert Scheer
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Ghost Story: Put Banks Out of Their Misery
America’s largest financial institutions are insolvent. It’s time to face the truth and take the painful actions that will allow the economy to recover.
Nicholas von Hoffman
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Save the News, Not the Newspaper
The newspaper industry is falling off a cliff and with it may go much of our civil discourse.
Eric Alterman
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Eight Is Enough
With the birth of Nadya Suleman’s octuplets, we confront the virtues of motherhood, the ethics of fertility clinics and the myths we still concoct about childless women’s worth.
Patricia J. Williams
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Books & the Arts
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Henri Cole: The Art of Violent Concision
Henri Cole’s Blackbird and Wolf contains some of the most truthful poems in modern American poetry. He is this year’s winner of the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize.
John Koethe
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The Human Metaphor: Marlene Dumas and Barkley Hendricks
The paintings of Marlene Dumas, at the Museum of Modern Art, and Barkley Hendricks, at the Studio Museum of Harlem.
Barry Schwabsky
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States of Mind: The Idea of Iran
Thirty years after the Islamic revolution, Iran teeters on the brink of a different kind of revolt. Four books shed light on an ancient nation’s many incarnations.
Negar Azimi
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Back Talk: Adam Frank
A conversation with astrophysicist Adam Frank about science, religion and manifestations of the sacred in the physical world.
Christine Smallwood
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An Alienation Artist: Kafka and His Critics
Unraveling the Kafkaesque mystique of Franz Kafka.
Alexander Provan
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Letters
‘Standing on the Shoulders of Giants’
Our readers were profoundly moved by John Mavroudis’s February 2 Obama inauguration cover and wrote in large numbers to tell us so. <
Our Readers and John Mavroudis
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Crossword
Puzzle No. 3158
ACROSS
1 Perhaps the people who work for you–material workers, with stripes to show for it. (5,9)
Frank W. Lewis