Showing results for: ukraine (page 157)
The end of the Pax Americana?
Michael Lind
Obama has the chance to end our Cold War hangover, and start an era where the U.S. is not the sole global policeman
Profile of a hacker: How the “soupnazi” did it
Vincent Rossmeier
The man allegedly behind the biggest identity theft ever did it through a fairly simple ploy
Foreign investors snap up African farmland
Horand Knaup, Juliane von Mittelstaedt
With population set to skyrocket, food is the new oil
Rape in Berlin: Facing the truth
Andrew O'Hehir
Thousands of German women were sexually assaulted near the end of WW II. Brutal payback, a war crime or both?
Both major candidates claim victory in Iran
Alex Koppelman
The country's official media says President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been reelected, but a rival says he won
Attack of the 66-year-old mother
Amy Benfer
The strange case of Elizabeth Adeney prompts the question: How old is too old to have a child?
Simon Johnson says: “Break up the banks”
Andrew Leonard
It's time to get all Teddy Roosevelt on Wall Street, declares the former chief economist of the IMF. Bring out the big antitrust artillery and fire away.
The newly released secret laws of the Bush administration
Glenn Greenwald
Long concealed Justice Department memoranda reveal the true extent of the extremism and radicalism prevailing in the U.S. over the last eight years.
The problem with cheap oil
Michael Klare
The price may fall still farther in 2009. Be careful what you wish for.
Polynesian chickens in Peru and other mysteries
Andrew Leonard
Let's hear it for the top ten archaeological discoveries of 2007 -- more clues in the most complicated mystery ever written
“Fault Lines”
James Hannaham
The masterful and ambitious "Fault Lines" reveals how history gets erased and reinvented, and hints at how it might repeat itself.
Nobody’s dummy
Camille Paglia
Liberals underestimate Sarah Palin's vitality and -- yes -- smarts at their own peril. Plus: Obama's presidential air, Biden's condescending mugging, feminism's lost sisters.
Ask the pilot
Patrick Smith
Around the world in 41 hours and 17,000 miles. Plus: I want to live in Emirates first-class.
Making a mockery of 9/11
Joan Walsh
Sarah Palin's ignorance about foreign policy Thursday night will shadow John McCain's legacy, no matter who wins the election.
Don’t click on this item about Obama’s steamy sex video
Cyrus Farivar
Older Windows virus repackaged with Obama's name in subject line.
Salon Radio: Matthew Yglesias
Glenn Greenwald
What are the most glaring deficiencies in media coverage of the campaign and what can be done to combat them? Plus: Is the Obama campaign excessively minimizing foreign policy differences with the GOP?
Palin and Gibson go head to head
Alex Koppelman
Early excerpts of Sarah Palin's interview with ABC's Charlie Gibson have been released, and it appears Gibson wasn't the patsy some predicted he'd be.
Critics’ Picks
Salon Staff
What you need to see, read, do this week: A sexpert's look at Sarah Palin, the exhilarating return of "Entourage," and a bad-cake blog.
Hench items
King Kaufman
The U.S. track and field debacle and NBC's shabby treatment of the games' glamour event. Plus: Keri Walsh. And: Teddy Atlas.
Boxing: The point of absurdity
King Kaufman
American Rau'shee Warren's loss, crazy as it was, was business as usual in a sport that's been gutted by its scoring system.
Cyberwar rages on in Georgia
Evan Ratliff
Government sites under attack from Russian hackers move to U.S.-based servers, including Atlanta's Tulip Systems.
iPhone pre-launch: Looking “Inside Steve’s Brain”
Farhad Manjoo
Author Leander Kahney on Steve Jobs' success.
A Chinese aircraft carrier paradox
Andrew Leonard
Was the 17th century admiral whose name has reportedly been given to a Chinese naval vessel a traitor or a patriot? Or both?
Who’s the superpower now?
Michael T. Klare
As oil prices drain the U.S. of military power and influence, Russia is rising as a world force again.
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