March 30, 2009
Bring America‘s most incisive writers and editors to your classroom with free teaching material from The Nation.
· FREE Weekly Teaching Guides and Educator Email Newsletter
· Discounted subscriptions.
To download the teaching guide click here
-
Feature
The Afghanistan Americans Seldom Notice
When it’s all over and we finally do leave, the Afghans of Bamiyan Province will be at least as poor as they ever were in what will remain a devastated country.
Pratap Chatterjee
-
A Conversation with Mauricio Funes
Mauricio Funes, president-elect of El Salvador, talks of the meaning of his recent victory, aspirations for his administration and the inspiration provided by the late Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero.
Roberto Lovato and Josue Rojas
-
-
Imagine Otherwise
If we are to build a new world out of the ashes of the old, we need to imagine and organize in the most expansive and inclusive ways.
Lisa Duggan
-
The Necessary Eloquence of Protest
If these are near-to-the-end times, we must be as forthright about the need for disorder as were our populist and socialist ancestors.
Mike Davis
-
Why Africa Doesn’t Want Foreign Aid
Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo argues that aid actually undermines the social and economic fabric of the developing world.
Sonia Shah
-
Tell ‘The Nation’: The Recession Hits Home
Our readers report how the recession is changing life in the workplaces, homes and schools across the nation. Let us know what’s happening in your community.
Our Readers
-
Pakistan in Turmoil
Pakistan’s Chief Justice is restored after protests rock Lahore, but questions remain about the stability of President Asif Ali Zardari–and new challenges for the Obama administration.
Barbara Crossette
-
A Post-Capitalist Future is Possible
The current economic crisis probably won’t be the magic intervention to usher in a new era, but there are opportunities to advance the socialist cause.
Doug Henwood
-
Rebuilding a Good Jobs Economy
In this deep economic crisis, we have an opportunity to set the bar higher. Let’s not just stimulate the economy; let’s rebuild it with good jobs.
Annette Bernhardt and Christine Owens
-
Obama’s Debt to New Orleans
The Democratic Party found its voice in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. It owes the people of New Orleans a real recovery.
Melissa Harris-Perry and James Perry
-
Redefining National Security
Some military analysts are warning Obama that insurencies, revolts and economically driven instability could threaten our way of life. It’s a path fraught with hazards.
Michael T. Klare
-
Can America Make a Deal to Save the Planet?
Despite inaction over the past eight years, the United States still has a chance to reclaim a leading global role in curbing greenhouse gas emissions.
Sophie Ragsdale
-
Philadelphia Rising
The mayor’s budget plan would close libraries. The people say, Think again.
Robert S. Eshelman
-
Fixing the Fed
To restore the nation’s broken financial system, Washington must reform the Federal Reserve.
William Greider
-
The Perfect Storm
The intensifying economic crisis slams the world of nonprofit organizations.
Eyal Press
-
Editorial
John C. Hyde, Journalist and Author
Remembering a journalist, biographer and head of the Fund for Investigative Journalism.
Rebecca Clarren
-
Is Our Big Change Moment Coming?
The time is ripe for another another progressive revolution: we only have to make it happen.
Michael Lux
-
Is the Next Defense Budget a Stimulus Package?
World War II defense spending helped pull us out of a depression, but don’t count on that happening this time.
Frida Berrigan
-
-
‘Nation’ Note
Arthur C. Danto steps down as art critic of The Nation but continues as a contributing editor.
The Editors
-
Populists in the House
If the new Populist Caucus is to make a difference in Congress, its members must channel popular fury at Wall Street’s amen corner on Capitol Hill.
John Nichols
-
Noted.
Robert Dreyfuss on the assault against Charles Freeman, Edward McClelland on the right of the homeless to hold office, Barbara Crossette on Lakhdar Brahimi
The Editors
-
Healthcare Enemy No. 1
Hospital magnate Rick Scott, the face of GOP resistance to healthcare reform, has won the Florida Republican gubernatorial primary.
Chris Hayes
-
Healthcare Heats Up
Don’t listen to the fearmongers: government-run healthcare is cost-efficient, effective and far superior to the free-market mess we’re in.
The Editors
-
GET UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS FOR LESS THAN $3 A MONTH!
-
Column
Perp Walks, Not Bonuses
Don’t reward the rogue financiers at AIG and Goldman Sachs who enriched themselves while impoverishing millions. Investigate them.
Robert Scheer
-
Charles Barkley and Sheriff Joe’s Special Treatment
The embattled NBA Hall of Famer is perhaps the only figure who can expose “America’s Toughest Sheriff” as the abusive bigot he is.
Dave Zirin
-
It Can Happen Here
Media watchdogs who slept through the Bush era now have little interest in examining just how many of our liberties were lost.
Eric Alterman
-
Science and Supposition
The new Obama protocols on scientific research will influence not just stem cells but climate change, genetics, sex education and food safety.
Patricia J. Williams
-
-
Books & the Arts
Lingo: What Child Is This?
This is Lingo, a new occasional column about language. Is language acquisition uncanny or orphic?
Ange Mlinko
-
The Half-Forgotten Prophet: C. Wright Mills
A half-century later, re-evaluating the works of C. Wright Mills, in The Politics of Truth.
Norman Birnbaum
-
A Tough Flower Girl: On Norman Maclean
In Norman Maclean’s stories, tragedy comes garlanded in a prose style nearly unsurpassed for its bright flashes of remembrance, its whispers out of time.
Philip Connors
-
Back Talk: Elaine Showalter
A conversation with the author of A Jury of Her Peers: American Women Writers from Anne Bradstreet to Annie Proulx.
Christine Smallwood
-
Sallow, Queer, Sagacious: Lincoln Through the Ages
A new anthology of essays captures the many faces of Lincoln over the decades.
Brenda Wineapple
-
Philadelphia Rising
The mayor’s budget plan would close libraries. The people say, Think again.
Robert S. Eshelman
-
‘Nation’ Note
Arthur C. Danto steps down as art critic of The Nation but continues as a contributing editor.
The Editors
-
-
The stakes are higher now than ever. Get The Nation in your inbox.
-
Letters
-
Crossword