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October 12, 2009
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Feature
Anti-Choice Amendments Fail in Senate Finance Committee
Two anti-choice amendments considered by the Senate Finance Committee today were soundly defeated.
Sharon Lerner
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Arrest Warrant Out for USAID Contractor in Afghanistan
While corruption by the Afghan government has been widely condemned, corruption by Western officials in Afghanistan has received little if any scrutiny.
Aram Roston
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The Student Sex Column Movement
The explosion of student sex columns, as captivating as they are controversial, represents a campus movement possessed of the same subversive potential that fueled 1960s student activism.
Alex DiBranco
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What Have We Done to Democracy?
What’s next in a world where democracy has been so hollowed out, so emptied of meaning?
Arundhati Roy
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There Is Much to Do: An Interview With Hugo Chavez
Hugo Chávez talks about his relationship with Barack Obama, the Honduran crisis, plans to extend the Pentagon’s presence in Colombia, and domestic successes and challenges.
Greg Grandin
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Fortress Pittsburgh
In heavily fortified Pittsburgh, protesters are kept isolated from local residents and from conference attendees.
Robert S. Eshelman
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Where is the Defund Blackwater Act?
Democrats joined Republicans in voting to “Defund ACORN” yet have done nothing to stop Blackwater’s taxpayer-funded crusade in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Jeremy Scahill
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The Silent Depression
Among racial and ethnic minorities, a disproportionately high foreclosure rate is spreading to homeowners with prime loans.
Greg Kaufmann
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Healthcare Reform–at the Price of Women’s Health?
If Republicans don’t have much hope of derailing healthcare reform, they still have a shot at seriously limiting women’s access to affordable reproductive healthcare.
Sharon Lerner
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A Tale of Two Countries
Silvio Berlusconi’s increasingly erratic behavior may bring about his downfall. But in a bitterly divided Italy, the most likely successor does not look appetizing.
Frederika Randall
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How to Trap a President in a Losing War
Are we heading for a Petraeus Moment in the Afghan War, along with a titanic civilian-military clash of wills?
Tom Engelhardt
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Meet the Hazzards
If banks were people, here’s what the full $17.5 trillion bailout would look like.
Chris Hayes and Nomi Prins
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America’s Teacher
The Shock Doctrine author interviews Michael Moore on the roots of the economic crisis and the promise and peril of this political moment.
Naomi Klein
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Editorial
The Supreme Court Slams the Door
How a mere “procedural” decision blatantly shortchanges justice.
Herman Schwartz
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Democrats Don’t Deliver Healthcare Reform… Again
Five Democratic senators on the Senate Finance Committee helped defeat a public option; do they really think that will advance reform–or even their political careers?
Adam Howard
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The Medicare Gravy Train
Humana and other insurance industry giants have been fomenting a scare campaign among seniors to keep the industry’s wasteful taxpayer subsidy going.
Trudy Lieberman
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Huge Hurdles to Nuclear and Energy Reform
At the UN this week, Barack Obama told the world to stop complaining about US hegemony and start working with Washington on big global problems. He should take his own advice.
Barbara Crossette
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Missing from Healthcare Bills: Coverage for Reproductive Health
Health reform promises support for comprehensive care. That promise plainly does not extend to women who depend on public funds and seek abortions.
Sylvia Law
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Noted.
Panic and silence greet the release of the UN Human Rights Council report on Gaza; the FCC backs net neutrality.
The Editors
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Lowballing Health Reform
Progressives need to be as concerned about insurance coverage affordability as we are about a public option.
J. Lester Feder
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Nader’s Road to Utopia
In Ralph Nader’s new utopian novel, “only the super-rich can save us.”
Richard Lingeman
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A White Hot Season
Policy can be racist even when no one crafting it harbors hatred of a particular racial group.
The Editors
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Column
Exorcising America’s Diplomatic Demons
This week the Chinese Communists celebrate their sixtieth year in power, an event that the make-war-not-peace crowd might benefit from contemplating.
Robert Scheer
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Can the NFL Tackle Homophobia?
Some National Football League players appear to be turning over a new leaf when it comes to gay rights, but a history of homophobia still haunts the sport.
Dave Zirin
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Voice of America?
When does a society tip from expressive speech into excessive fulmination and then into repression or violence?
Patricia J. Williams
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Books & the Arts
Nader’s Road to Utopia
In Ralph Nader’s new utopian novel, “only the super-rich can save us.”
Richard Lingeman
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America’s Teacher
The Shock Doctrine author interviews Michael Moore on the roots of the economic crisis and the promise and peril of this political moment.
Naomi Klein
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Fever Charts: On Jack Tworkov
Jack Tworkov’s writings wrestle with the figures of Abstract Expressionism and his own lost illusions.
Barry Schwabsky
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Back Talk: E.L. Doctorow
A conversation with the author of Homer and Langley about opting out.
Christine Smallwood
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Ratmansky Takes Manhattan
A celebrated Russian choreographer is charting a stylish new course for American Ballet Theatre.
Marina Harss
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Letters
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Crossword
Puzzle No. 3186
ACROSS
1 A playboy of this world finds a sweet, dizzy registered nurse, a short one! (7)
Frank W. Lewis