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November 9, 2009
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Feature
Pentagon Investigating Iraq Electrocution Death
Reps. Jan Schakowsky and Carol Shea-Porter argue that since Adam Hermanson died while working on a Defense Department contract, the DoD is obliged to investigate.
Jeremy Scahill
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Joe Lieberman and the Opt-Out Revolution
Progressives rejoiced when Sen. Harry Reid announced that the Senate healthcare bill would include a public option. But the jubilation was short-lived.
Lindsay Beyerstein
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Judge Real in Alex Sanchez Case Is Surreal
The evidence against Alex Sanchez is quite refutable, but that assumes a fair trial. And that’s not possible in Judge Real’s courtroom.
Tom Hayden
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Welcome to 2025: American Pre-eminence Ends Fifteen Years Early
The American intelligence community has missed the boat on how quickly the US has fallen from “sole superpower” status.
Michael T. Klare
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Honduras’s ‘Bloodless Coup’: What You’re Not Seeing on TV
In Honduras, people are dying while the world looks the other way. Real international pressure–especially from the US–is the only force that could stop that now.
Avi Lewis
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Putting Caste on Notice
Navi Pillay is the first UN human rights commissioner to take on caste discrimination.
Barbara Crossette
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Climate Activists Hit the Streets
Turnout for 350.org’s International Climate Day of Action was high in New York City–and in some of the developing nations most vulnerable to effects of global warming.
Nathaniel Herz
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Ehren Watada: Free at Last
After three years of trying to convict Lt. Ehren Watada for refusing to deploy to Iraq, the Army has allowed him to resign.
Jeremy Brecher and Brendan Smith
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The Tide Is Turning on Healthcare Reform
In the past month, momentum on healthcare reform has unmistakably shifted as progressives have taken to the streets, the Internet and the halls of Congress to push for a bold plan.
Peter Dreier
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As Rumors Fly, a Call for a United Front on Healthcare in the House
There has been a lot of guessing recently about what the final House version of healthcare reform will look like. It’s time for some clarity.
Raul Grijalva
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The Big Kids Play With Corked Bats
What if campaign finance reform took a page from baseball’s playbook?
Helen Rosenthal
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Judge Refuses to Dismiss War Crimes Case Against Blackwater
A federal judge sends the lawyers for Iraqi victims of Blackwater back to the drawing board, while rejecting Blackwater’s plea to toss out the case.
Jeremy Scahill
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The Best Wall of Defense
The most dependable guarantor of Pakistani stability isn’t a troop buildup in Afghanistan; it’s Pakistan’s emerging middle class.
Mosharraf Zaidi
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Paranoia Over Pakistan
Is Pakistan really in danger of falling into the hands of the Taliban?
Manan Ahmed
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Attack of the Drones
Airstrikes, manned or unmanned, regulated or not, cannot build a better Afghan future.
Priya Satia
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The Ethnic Split
The tenacity of the Taliban insurgency is rooted in opposition to a foreign occupation that is particularly distasteful to the Pashtuns.
Selig S. Harrison
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The ‘Safe Haven’ Myth
If we leave Afghanistan, Al Qaeda will be in no position to re-establish a base there.
John Mueller
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High Cost, Low Odds
Staying in Afghanistan will cost many more American soldiers’ lives and hundreds of billions of dollars. Is it worth it?
Stephen M. Walt
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Afghanistan: A Special Issue
The essays in our forum call into question many of the myths and faulty assumptions about the best course of US policy in Afghanistan.
The Nation
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Remember the Women?
Women belong at the center of the debate over the Afghan war, not on the margins.
Ann Jones
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Editorial
Devil in the Old Dominion
Everyone is looking to Virginia’s off-year gubernatorial contest as a Middle American barometer for 2010.
Bob Moser
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Dem Doldrums in Gotham
Whatever his party label, Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s firmest loyalties are to Wall Street. Why is his Democratic opponent unwilling to forcefully challenge him on economic issues?
Theodore Hamm
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Crafting Health Reform
Healthcare reform is looking less like a fantasy and more like a probability–but we need to keep a close watch on affordability, financing and the public option.
J. Lester Feder
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Obama’s Fateful Choice
US Afghanistan policy should not be held hostage to the president’s past rhetoric.
The Editors
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Column
Lieberman Twists the Knife
The Connecticut senator declared Tuesday that he would support a filibuster of any healthcare reform bill that has a public option–even the version with the “trigger” compromise accepted by Sen. Olympia Snowe.
Robert Scheer
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Just Don’t Call It ‘Journalism’
By refusing to acknowledge Fox News’s avowed partisanship, its MSM defenders diminish the work of honest journalists who try to play fair.
Eric Alterman
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Nobel Peace Sparks War
It’s peculiar, the vocabulary that makes a liability out of the Nobel Prize.
Patricia J. Williams
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Books & the Arts
At Least, At Most: The Novels of Don Carpenter
With his plain, weather-beaten prose, Don Carpenter was a good enough novelist not to have to prove it.
Charles Taylor
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A City Unbottled: Mary Beard’s Pompeii
In The Fires of Vesuvius, Mary Beard unearths the seedier realities of the Roman social and political experience.
Joy Connolly
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A Makeshift World: On Thomas Demand
For the photographer Thomas Demand, Germany is like any other country because it is haunted by history.
Barry Schwabsky
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Letters
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Crossword
Puzzle No. 3190
ACROSS
1 Setting out, and putting on the scales what keeps things steady. (8,6)
Frank W. Lewis