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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 441)

Imitation nation

Lisa Movius
Is piracy-crazed China a nightmare vision of the future, or just a developing country going through some severe growing pains?

A kinder, gentler militia?

Dan Laidman
In the aftermath of Sept. 11, fringe militia organizations are recasting themselves as neighborhood watch groups. But old ways die hard.

Where Democrats fear to tread

Anthony York
Al Gore and John Kerry are criticizing the Bush war effort. Will colleagues dare to follow?

Foul cry

Ben Fritz
When media watchdogs like FAIR and MRC complain about bias, they often only reveal their own.

A long, slow revolution

Damien Cave
Despite the U.S. Supreme Court's decision on school vouchers, one expert says dramatic change could be decades away.

Cruel summer

Carina Chocano
Amateur Whitney Houston covers! "Baywatch" babes turned low-rent spokesmodels! Obscene crank calls! If you found the prime-time season too taxing, summer TV is for you.

Marvel’s forgotten heroes

Mark Holcomb
Spidey's the celeb of the year. Blade and the X-Men are huge, with Daredevil, Iron Man and the Hulk waiting in the wings. When will Hollywood show some love for Marvel's venerable Fantastic Four?

The dangerous new FBI

Earl Ofari Hutchinson
With nobody willing to speak up as our civil liberties erode, who will protect us from the new agency dedicated to spying on Americans?

Mueller under fire

Anthony York
A Senate committee plans a new hearing to ask the FBI director: What went wrong?

Taming the bear

Suzy Hansen
Strobe Talbott says Clinton deserves much credit for Russia's warming to the West -- and recalls a drunken Yeltsin calling for pizza in his underpants.

The death of etiquette

Jonathon Keats
For proof positive that "gracious living" is now extinct, look no further than the new revision of Amy Vanderbilt's classic guide.

Truth and reconciliation

Julia Gracen
Incest accusations of the recovered-memory craze tore families apart. Now one of its leaders wants to let bygones be bygones.

Fevered rhetoric

Max J. Castro
The president keeps his hard line on Cuba as public opinion -- even among exiles -- softens.

The “moderate” Bulldozer

Aluf Benn
The Likud vote rejecting Palestinian statehood allows Ariel Sharon to present himself as a centrist -- an image his staunch ally George Bush is happy to affirm.

Endangered species: The Jewish dove

Anthony York
Groups holding out for peace try to counteract a growing image of American Jews as pro-Sharon -- and, increasingly, pro-Bush.

Sharon’s war

Flore de Preneuf
A year and a half ago, liberal Israelis warned that if Ariel Sharon were elected, horror would overtake them and the Palestinians. They were right

Watson, come here, I want to fire you

Damien Cave
Angry at his predictions of global warming, the Bush administration and the energy industry strive to unseat a prominent scientist.

Pretty geeky privacy

Bill Lamb
More and more people want powerful, easy-to-use encryption software, but the commercial world isn't providing it. Can open source deliver?

Must-see TV

Flore de Preneuf
For the human rights activist who organized last week's daring North Korean refugee escape, success hinged on having a worldwide audience.

Did “Black Hawk Down” sell out?

Michelle Goldberg
Actor Brendan Sexton III challenges Ridley Scott, Mark Bowden and the entire U.S. military from a little cafe in Brooklyn.

“Jurassic Park,” eat your heart out

Katharine Mieszkowski
Ecological historian Tim Flannery describes the days of megafauna, when 13-ton elephants and shoulder-height armadillos clomped around among humans.

Evolution, Enron-style

Amol Sarva
Not all fast-mutating organisms flourish. Some go extinct.

Make Iran a friend, not a foe

Cameron Kamran
President Bush's demonizing of Iran is a shortsighted move that misses a rare opportunity to improve relations with a crucial regional player.

“Houston, We Have a Problem”

Salon Staff
By Katharine Mieszkowski
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