September 21, 2009
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Feature
Another Mysterious Electrocution Death in Iraq
The death of a Triple Canopy contractor in Iraq bears a striking resemblance to an earlier electrocution ruled to be a “negligent homicide.”
Jeremy Scahill
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Afghanistan by the Numbers
How to measure “success” in Afghanistan, the metrics for a war gone to hell.
Tom Engelhardt
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Working Without Laws
Employment and labor law violations are still persistent in America. There is hope for change with the new administration.
Annette Bernhardt, Ruth Milkman and Nik Theodore
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Zelaya Speaks
In an exclusive Nation interview, the deposed Honduran president assesses the significance of his recent meeting with Secretary of State Clinton.
Tom Hayden
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Zelaya’s Coup
In an exclusive Nation interview, the ousted Honduran president calls the new State Department aid cutoff a “direct blow” against the regime that exiled him.
Tom Hayden
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Mississippi Growing
An African-American community with New Deal roots finds some hope in a farmers’ market.
Habiba Alcindor
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Wendell Berry’s Wisdom
Today’s conversation about food was started by dot-connecting writers like Berry in the 1970s.
Michael Pollan
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Green Shoots in New Orleans
A frustrating quest for food security has led some residents to grow their own.
Dayo Olopade
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Cafeteria Consciousness
Concerned about global warming, students are pushing for change–in their dining halls.
Anna Lappé
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Ending Africa’s Hunger
Bill Gates’s fortune is funding a new Green Revolution. But is that what Africans need?
Raj Patel, Eric Holt-Gimenez and Annie Shattuck
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Food is Freedom
To engage a broader audience, food-justice activists need to change their language.
LaDonna Redmond
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Detroit’s ‘Quiet Revolution’
How we came to see vacant lots not as blight but as opportunities to grow our own food.
Grace Lee Boggs
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An American Right to Food
People are beginning to understand the connection between our stomachs and our common destiny.
Dave Murphy
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Why Cooking Matters
The campaign for food democracy needs to start with boning knives and cast iron skillets.
Dan Barber
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How to Grow Democracy
Five leading figures of this country’s food movement reflect on how food democracy can be achieved, here and now.
The Nation
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Editorial
Obama Shows His Progressive Spine
The president’s healthcare speech was not a full-fledged antidote to decades of Reaganism. But it was an eloquent call for a new progressive role for government. We must build on it.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
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The Nightmare of Christianity
Matthew Murray, a disturbed young gunman behind the the shootings in Colorado Springs, chose to end his nightmare and rebel against Christian-right self-help gurus and cult-like doctrines.
Max Blumenthal
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Remember the Real Villain–Wall Street
In confusing times like these, it’s important to keep the story straight.
Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh
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Ten Things You Can Do to Start a Community Garden
Band together to gain control of your own food.
The Nation
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Food Without Fear
Bad peanuts and killer spinach: that’s the food story of 2009. But in the coming months we may see a huge turning point in the fight for safety.
John Nichols
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Vigilantes: Free to Roam?
Our investigation into the shootings of African-Americans in the days after Hurricane Katrina seems to have gotten the feds’ attention; but in New Orleans, the wheels of justice have rusted.
Esther Kaplan
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By Any Means Necessary
The window is open for President Obama and a Democratic Congress to finally reform our healthcare system. Success means a bill with a strong public option, not a watered-down “bipartisan” measure.
The Editors
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Column
A 9/11 Reality Check
What if eight years ago the World Trade Center had been leveled by a small nuclear bomb that took out most of lower Manhattan as well?
Robert Scheer
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The Female Gourmet
A movie about women’s struggle to express their gifts through work? Delicious.
Katha Pollitt
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Obama’s Last Chance
We crave drama, but we’re not getting it, except in the form of racist rallies.
Alexander Cockburn
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Cheney Offers Sharp Defense of C.I.A. Interrogation Tactics
Again, Dick says that torture’s good.
Calvin Trillin
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Books & the Arts
The Female Gourmet
A movie about women’s struggle to express their gifts through work? Delicious.
Katha Pollitt
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Cornucopia Blues
How will the good-food revolution move beyond its evangelical phase?
Brent Cunningham
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Aracataca and Sucre
Will narrowed on a single object and fixed in the face of adversity–such is the recurring story of Gabriel García Márquez's work and life.
William Deresiewicz
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Letters
Letters
Four-Star Food Favorites
We invited readers to tell us about their most beloved food institutions.
Our Readers
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Crossword
Puzzle No. 3183
ACROSS
1 and 6 You can get such things beneath the vendor’s place of business being so bodied. (14)
Frank W. Lewis