Peter Schrag on immigration, Luvh Rakhe on the writers strike, Colin Fleming on Julio Cortazar and Carol Dunlop

Articles

Letters

Editorials & Comment

  • Election '08

    : As Iowans are poised to kick off a front-loaded political season, do standout candidates Edwards and Obama have the potential to appeal to progressives?

  • Noted.

    : Dana Perino's ignorance, Michael Ratner's Puffin/Nation Prize. Subscribe

  • Writers of the World Unite

    Luvh Rakhe : Striking members of the Writers Guild of America are bringing the labor movement something it hasn't had for a long time: an audience. Subscribe

  • Nation Note

    : Welcoming Peter Gizzi, The Nation's new poetry editor.

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  • Obama, Race and the Presidency

    Ari Melber : Barack Obama's historic victory in Iowa comes at a crucial time for a nation still grappling with how remedies to offset racism affect America's power structure.

  • Return of the Swift Boaters

    Christopher Hayes : As conservatives stare into an electoral abyss, the shadowy group that smeared John Kerry in 2004 has reorganized and stands poised to do its dirty work again.

  • Where Have All the Black Soldiers Gone?

    The number of young black enlistees is dropping dramatically.

  • Young Voters Could Decide Iowa

    The student vote might be the deciding factor in the January 3 Iowa Caucus.

  • Top 10 Youth Activism Victories in 2007

    From shutting down toxic waste facilities to making colleges more affordable, young people all over America put their energies into remarkable actions for their communities, and for the world.

  • Edwards Calls to End US Training Effort in Iraq

    Tom Hayden : His new stance could have an impact on Iowa caucus-goers.

  • TRUTHDIG

    Charlie Wilson's War--and Ours

    Robert Scheer : Unlike the plot of the latest Tom Hanks film, the blowback price of our incessant meddling could prove quite high. And even Hollywood can't put a pretty face on that one.

  • Amnesia at the Multiplex

    Lakshmi Chaudhry : Two films address US adventures in Afghanistan and Pakistan, with a big dose of historical amnesia, political pandering, moral superiority and outraged innocence.

  • Pakistan Without Benazir

    Moni Mohsin : The deeply flawed, arresting, autocratic Benazir Bhutto had the wherewithal to save her country but repeatedly disappointed. Yet she represented the best secular option for breaching Pakistan's multiple fissures.

  • Benazir Bhutto: A Death Foretold

    Graham Usher : For all her pro-American rhetoric, many in Benazir Bhutto's party held America responsible for the "judicial murder" of her father. Will Bhutto's assassination have a like impact?

  • Fiction

    About Citizen Kang

    Gary Phillips : Political fact marries political fiction in Citizen Kang, an online serialized novel that unfolds in weekly installments on The Nation.com throughout Campaign 08.

  • Benazir Bhutto: An Age of Hope Is Over

    Barbara Crossette : As the world mourns the loss of Benazir Bhutto, it would be myopic to focus only on Islamic-inspired violence and on Pakistan. For all of post-independence history, South Asia has been a region drenched in blood.

  • Another Death in Rawalpindi

    Aziz Huq : The killing of Benazir Bhutto echoes Pakistan's troubled history, portends more violence and flags a proud country's collapse into chaos. It also signals the manifest bankruptcy of the Bush Administration's anti-terrorism.

  • Fiction

    Wide Stance

    Gary Phillips : Meet California Congresswoman Cynthia Kang, a woman of considerable political ambition, and some secrets. Episode 1 of an ongoing online political mystery.

  • State of the World 2008

    Barbara Crossette : The United Nations' chief troubleshooter and mediator, Lakhdar Brahimi, considers what should come next in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan and how US foreign foreign policy went so far astray.

  • Howl

    Too Much of a Bad Thing

    Nicholas von Hoffman : Hillary Clinton's touting her expertise over Obama--but is experience at political attack, mega-fundraising and cronyism really all that desirable?

  • Muqtada al-Sadr's Power Grab

    Mohamad Bazzi : The bad boy of Iraqi politics is going back to school. al-Sadr's plan to become an ayatollah has enormous implications for Iraqis and the United States.

  • Best of The Nation 2007

    Joan Connell : It was a year of alarming news and amazing reporting on the Iraq War, the rise of private mercenary firms, the burgeoning business of disaster capitalism, an ever more vulnerable environment. Here's how The Nation covered the year.

January 7, 2008 Cover Cover by Gene Case & Stephen Kling/Avenging Angels

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