Michael Moore's Sicko
Christopher Hayes : Michael Moore's healthcare documentary is less partisan, less outrageous--but more real--than anything he's done before.
Doug Henwood on private equity partnerships, Trudy Lieberman on Medicare, James Ron on Israeli architecture.
Christopher Hayes : Michael Moore's healthcare documentary is less partisan, less outrageous--but more real--than anything he's done before.
Trudy Lieberman
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Will an upcoming vote in Congress signal the end of Medicare?
Liza Featherstone
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SEIU President Andy Stern heads one of the strongest unions in the country. Why is he so cozy with corporations?
Elizabeth Drew : Peter Morgan's new play is highly entertaining; Frank Langella's portrait of Nixon is brutally amusing; yet the play is historically inaccurate.
Ramachandra Guha : Maoists say they're fighting for the invisible tribal peoples of India. Are they terrorists, or the product of a corrupt and unjust system?
Jon Wiener : The Rupert Murdoch effect: The progressive LA Weekly has gone from a well-reported newspaper to a flashy tabloid with "gotcha" articles.
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Front-loaded primaries and a volatile '08 race are creating unprecedented opportunities for progressives. They'll gain traction only if they form a smart, tech-savvy and cohesive movement.
Robert L. Borosage & Katrina vanden Heuvel : Campaign '08 is heading for a great debate: Will individualized plans or a broad public guarantee of coverage replace our broken corporate system?
Micah L. Sifry : Michael Bloomberg doesn't actually have to run for President to tilt the race his way.
Doug Henwood
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Is the private equity boom about to go bust?
Janet Afary & Kevin B. Anderson : Five new books explore the failed progressive movements in Iran, and the dilemma the US left faces today.
James Ron
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A new take on Israel/Palestine: Could Israel's architecture be the solution to the insoluble disputes?
Calvin Trillin
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How good a pup will Gordon Brown be?
Eric Alterman : What do the Washington Post --and the rest of the MSM--have against Al Gore?
Kevin McCarthy : You thought Arthur was gone for good? The indie magazine beloved for its music coverage and antiwar politics will resume publishing this summer.
Eric Kenning : The White House announced that the President has run out of his own bad ideas and is looking elsewhere for new ones, even if they don't make any sense.
Robert Scheer : He invaded Iraq, which had no connection to WMDs or terrorist threats against the US, while coddling the military junta in Pakistan, which was guilty on both counts. Go figure.
Mohamad Bazzi : Rocked by violence and sectarian hatred, Lebanon faces its presidential elections in paralysis, bound to a political system that's no longer viable and stymied over what kind of country it wants to be.
Annette Bernhardt : The Supreme Court's recent decision to deny home-care workers the right to overtime pay is speeding a race to the bottom that will affect every working person.
Ari Melber : Matt Stoller, Chris Bowers and Mike Lux have launched a new website designed link progressive outsiders with DC insiders.
Dave Zirin : Political struggle and its relation to sports is a question not of the past but of the future.
Robert Scheer : Liberated from having to serve time for his crime, he shares a perch with Bush and Cheney, somewhere high above the law.
Wiretap kicks off a new monthly interview column highlighting different career options in the progressive movement.
In 2004, a handful of grassroots music activism organizations registered over 1 million new voters. As many of these groups struggle for survival, who will use music to reach out to 50 million Millennials in 2008?
Tom Engelhardt : No need to wait until September to see if the surge is working. Just look at the numbers.
Students in West Virginia stare down the toxic silo of Big Coal. How will youth cope with the destruction of Appalachia and future environmental legacies? WireTap treks to the Mountain State to find out.
Barbara Ehrenreich : The super-rich are taking over all the beautiful places in America. What's left for you and me?
Student debt no longer hits as hard for Mainers.
Even college radio stations are subject to corporate pressures and playlists.
American colleges and universities grapple with their ties to slavery.
Yale activists convince their school to cover the HPV vaccine.
American students are great at advocating for others, but do very little advocacy for themselves.
Scenes from a libertarian journalism conference.
Dan Berger : The US Social Forum in Atlanta drew visionaries and veterans--of war and social movements--to chart a course for progressives.
Bruce Shapiro : With gleeful judicial activism, the Roberts Court swings right and sides with the interests of power.
Jessica Weisberg : Shimon Dotan's documentary Hot House takes a candid and compelling look at Palestinians serving life terms in Israeli prisons.
Dave Zirin : Congressional hearings about head injuries in the NFL raise questions about the consequences for old-timers and present-day players.
Rosa Miriam Elizalde : A Cuban writer pays tribute to Vilma Espín, wife of Raúl Castro and Cuba's first lady, who fought tirelessly for the rights of women in a male-dominated country.
Robert Dreyfuss : Dire predictions aside, it's not too late for a unified, nationalist Iraq to emerge from the rubble.
Cover art by Drew Friedman, cover design by Gene Case & Stephen Kling/Avenging Angels