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This re-usable notebook is eco-friendly and innovative

Shopping Content By Salon Marketplace
Made from stone paper, this notebook can be used over and over

Who gets hurt worst by the Electoral College? It’s not Democrats — it’s democracy

Reed E. Hundt
Think the Electoral College benefits Republicans? That's only true now — but it disenfranchises most Americans

Democrats set to gain seat on North Carolina Supreme Court — and that could quash GOP gerrymandering

Matthew Chapman
Chief Justice Mark Martin announces he will be stepping down next month to become the dean of Regent's law school

Time to dump Netanyahu

Alon Ben-Meir
Can the leaders of Israel’s political parties put the national interest above their party and their lust for power?

Anti-Zionism is not anti-Semitism: But disentangling them can be tricky

Matthew Rozsa
Rep. Rashida Tlaib has been unfairly accused of anti-Semitism, but there's a reason why these issues get confused

Brexit: An “escape room” with no escape

Terrence Guay
The UK's efforts to find a path out of the EU is beginning to look a lot like a game or riddle with no solution

From apricots to Apple: Keith Spencer on the “People’s History of Silicon Valley”

Andrew O'Hehir
Salon editor Keith Spencer on his ambitious account of the myth, history and real-world effects of tech's homeland

Humor and media hoaxes put social justice ideas on the map

Ian Reilly
The "Yes Men" bring out the utopian dimension of hoaxing

Trump, Mueller and the lessons of history: Special prosecutors “are incapable of saving us”

Andrew O'Hehir
Legal scholar Andrew Coan says Mueller's survival is a tribute to democracy — but don't look to him as a savior

Chicago, New York discounted most public input in expanding bike systems

Greg Griffin, Junfeng Jiao
Just a fraction of the docking stations were built in the places recommended by the public, a new study shows

How to change your phone settings so Apple, Google can’t track your movements

Jen King
Most people don’t understand how tracking really works — and the tech companies haven't helped inform customers

Think abortion rights is a “divisive” issue? Only to the political class

Amanda Marcotte
Yes, a fundamentalist minority passionately opposes abortion, but most Americans want it to be legal and accessible

“Replicas” review: Keanu Reeves’ awful cloning thriller is a hilarious mess

David Ehrlich
“Replicas” is a cloning thriller so carelessly stupid that it often feels like a mad science experiment gone wrong

Why Donald Trump and his children will be charged with crimes

Dean Obeidallah
Watch "Proof of Collusion" author Seth Abramson analyze Trump's Russia connections from every angle on SalonTV

Democrats seek a political phoenix: Can 2018’s biggest loser become 2020’s big winner?

Matthew Rozsa
Stacey Abrams, Andrew Gillum, Beto O'Rourke and Richard Ojeda are all strong contenders for the 2020 presidential

The road map for Trump’s final 10 months

Lucian K. Truscott IV
Nixon’s fall was more rapid than you think. Trump’s end will come at the same pace

Mitt’s been Trumped by history: Romney’s play will fail, and the GOP has nothing else

Heather Digby Parton
Is Romney's attack on Trump an effort to position himself as the GOP's 2020 savior? It's way too late for that

The 19 Netflix original series to be excited about in 2019

Ben Travers
Netflix is trying to kill us with kindness — or is it content? — in 2019, with an avalanche of new originals

The Left victories that defined 2018 — and give us hope for the New Year

Marc Daalder
Despite Trump’s destructive presidency, the Left made important strides this year

Is the psychology of deadly force ready for the courts?

Zachary Siegel
Psychologists disagree about using the neurobiology of stress to defend police officers who kill

Margaret Sullivan: Why Kellyanne Conway should be banished from cable news

"It's time (actually, well past time) for the mainstream media to enter the No Kellyanne Zone"

GOP’s scorched earth approach makes a mockery of democracy

Klaus Marre, DonkeyHotey
Minority rule undermines confidence in democracy

Paris is burning — and London too: World War IV and the crisis of democracy

Andrew O'Hehir
These events are not disconnected, and not as far away as they look. The crisis of democracy just got hotter
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