Showing results for: proud boys (page 48)
Letters
Salon Staff
Terror in the letters pages! Readers respond to Patrick Smith's "The Hysterical Skies."
Rage and danger in Kurdistan
Jen Banbury
Angry with the U.S. for betraying their dream of independence, the Kurds could ignite an Iraqi civil war.
I am my own wife
Rebecca Traister
She's still best known as Mrs. Springsteen, but on her new album Patti Scialfa steps out of the Boss's shadow.
This thick excitement
Nuala O'Faolain
The town-hall dances in my tiny Irish village were the most exquisite, prolonged foreplay the world has ever known.
The Sopranos’ stomping ground
Suzy Hansen
The world can make fun of New Jersey -- big hair, Bada Bing, Bon Jovi and all -- but natives know who's boss.
What little boys are made of
Meredith Maran
Rebecca Walker, the editor of a new collection of essays about the meaning of "masculinity," talks about her anthology -- and how her identity as a black, white and Jewish bisexual affects her work.
“Najaf is dying”
Phillip Robertson
A terrified Iraqi bookstore owner denounces the Mahdi Army as "barbarians" as Muqtada al-Sadr prepares for martyrdom at the hands of American troops.
After the tanks
Phillip Robertson
The young Al-Mahdi Army soldiers said nothing as we drove past. The U.S. Army had just blasted their cemetery stronghold with Apaches, and they didn't care about anything.
“Mean Girls”
Stephanie Zacharek
What do you get when "SNL's" Tina Fey writes a screenplay about social hierarchies in high school? A teen comedy ... for grown-ups.
The pop star who hated sex
Mark Simpson
Was he gay? Bisexual? Or really just celibate, as he claimed? "I'm just simply inches away from a monastery," Morrissey once quipped.
Banished from the American dream
Michelle Goldberg
The Kesbehs were a hardworking immigrant family with a successful business and deep roots in Houston. But after 9/11, the U.S. kicked them, along with thousands of other Arab and Muslim families, out of the country. Now, in a land the children barely know, they wonder why their life has been shattered.
Letters
Salon Staff
A Vietnam vet warns Bush backers are "playing a dangerous, self-destructive game" by trashing John Kerry's Purple Heart. Plus: Readers respond to P.W. Singer's two-part story, "Outsourcing the War."
Act like a man
Jill Storey
The other preschool boys tossed balls, but Matt played house with the girls. What do you do when your son doesn't act like the other boys?
Losing my religion
Katy Butler
A novice political volunteer explores what went wrong with Howard Dean's campaign and, with guarded optimism, looks to a future without him.
The state of your unions
Salon Staff
Straying, sexual dysfunction, traumatic vasectomies and other tales from the front lines of marriage.
The conservatives are outraged — about Bush
Michelle Goldberg
At the annual Conservative Political Action Conference, foot soldiers of the right rail against the big-government, free-spending ways of the White House.
Lord of the bling-bling
Heather Havrilesky
Hobbitses and half-naked starlets dominate the proceedings at Hollywoods classiest affair, the Golden Globes. A color commentary.
Video games, dragsters and death
Chalmers Johnson
How the military's new recruiting tools lure kids unprepared for the real dangers of war -- an excerpt from "The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic."
The state of your unions
Salon Staff
Salon's female readers tell tales of extramarital temptation, emotional and physical abuse, and cowboy dreams that went awry.
The greatest week in rock history
Eric Boehlert
Thirty-four years ago this week, the Beatles, Stones, Zeppelin, Temptations, Santana, Crosby Stills and Nash, and Creedence Clearwater
all shared top billing on the Billboard album chart. There's never been another lineup quite like it -- and there will never be again.
Save the Earth — dump Bush
David Talbot
In a slashing interview, environmental leader Bobby Kennedy Jr. denounces the administration's "crimes against nature" and discusses the Democratic presidential pack, the dawn of Arnold's California reign -- and his own political future.
Lord of the “hotel” flies
Heather Havrilesky
Dave -- the normal guy on the rancidly brilliant "Paradise Hotel" -- talks to Salon about giving up three months of his life to be another test rat in Fox's reality show experiment.
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