The Demilitarized Soldier: Andrew Bacevich, American Foreign Policy and Breach of Trust
A demilitarized soldier brings some honesty to a foreign policy addicted to war. Special art/multimedia needs:
A demilitarized soldier brings some honesty to a foreign policy addicted to war. Special art/multimedia needs:
If Ralph Nader owes us an apology for making Bush president, does John Kerry owe us one too?
In this month's edition of "Around the World," Tom Gallagher examines Jeremy Scahill's book and just-released documentary film Dirty Wars: a...
A destructive and endless "War on Terror" is spinning out of control.
A history of the Vietnam War that finds the My Lai massacre more the rule than the exception, Nick Turse’s new book is almost guaranteed to drop your...
Does the American Left take itself seriously enough to get involved in the 2016 presidential election?
The state of California's single payer movement
IN TRAMPLING OUT THE VINTAGE, Frank Bardacke has written the kind of history the professionals call “magisterial,” but hopefully its size...
BY 1967, IT HAD ALREADY BEEN 11 years since Leonard Cohen published his first volume of poetry. He had also written two novels, and was famous enough...
AS ANYONE WHO’S TRIED to do antiwar work over the last few years knows, not only can the President pretty well get away with murder any time he...
INSTEAD OF YELLING, “Kill the umpire,” as they supposedly did at nineteenth century baseball games, Dave Zirin’s Bad Sports...