Showing results for: ukraine (page 55)
Biden’s biggest mistake: It wasn’t what he said about Putin — it was taking it back
Brian Karem
Biden spoke from the heart, and people around the world were grateful. Only pundits and politicos were horrified
Chris Wallace says working at Fox News became “unsustainable” after hosts embraced election lies
Igor Derysh
Wallace was no longer "comfortable" at Fox when the network began to question election results, Capitol riot
Only Democratic governors — not Joe Biden — can protect the U.S. at this point
Heather Digby Parton
Our entire recent history would be completely different if it weren't for our dependence on fossil fuels
Will Smith slapping Chris Rock made the 94th Academy Awards one to remember — for the wrong reasons
Melanie McFarland
Some wonderful historic moments happened before and after Will Smith hit Chris Rock. Will anyone remember?
A new civil war? Maybe so — but it won’t look anything like the first one
Chauncey DeVega
Scholar Barbara Walter foresees 9/11-style attacks, and a sustained insurgency, rather than straight-up warfare
Nine words that shook the world: What was Joe Biden thinking?
Norman Solomon
Frantic day-after cleanup effort can't erase Biden's disastrous call for regime change in a rival nuclear power
Trump may need to look up the definition of “smart”
Kelly McClure
On Saturday the former president called Putin smart for the second time in a month
Plastic pollution could make much of humanity infertile, experts fear
Matthew Rozsa
Research suggests plastic pollution is causing dropping sperm counts — and could also be unstoppable
Some evangelicals claim Ukraine war means the end times — as usual, they’re wrong
Nathaniel Manderson
Every few years, my fellow evangelicals claim the Antichrist has risen and the world is ending. It's never true
The “race-obsessed liberal” nightmare: “We have to fight for a country that doesn’t love us back”
D. Watkins
Writer Wajahat Ali stopped by "Salon Talks" to discuss his new book, incarceration, Ukraine and white privilege
The masculine ideal of suppressing one’s feelings has all kinds of awful repercussions
Christopher Kilmartin, Ronald F. Levant
Men who become used to suppressing all emotion will eventually lose the ability to feel joy
Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene get more applause than Trump at Georgia rally
Bob Brigham
As usual, the former leader of the free world threw a pity party over how mean people were to him.
When a leading Republican called for world government — and Einstein and Gandhi backed him
Matthew Rozsa
It sounds like alternate history: A Republican who ran against FDR — from the left. Meet Wendell Willkie
Fox News guest says it’s unnecessary for Ukrainian refugees to come to America
Meaghan Ellis
Laura Ingraham and Todd Bensman criticized President Joe Biden’s commitment to granting Ukrainian's entry
Russia’s holy war: Vladimir Putin, Pope Francis, the Virgin Mary and the fate of Ukraine
Kathryn Joyce
Putin's war is unleashing bizarre religious divisions — and for some Catholics it's the fulfillment of prophecy
Western embargoes of Russian gas offer a real shot at a post-carbon future
Carl Pope
Confronted with the sudden cessation of imported Russian fossil fuels, the West now faces two paths
How democracy dies: When it comes to Jan. 6, the American people can’t handle the truth
Chauncey DeVega
The House probe wants to create a "narrative thriller" in hopes Americans will care about an attack on democracy
What classic literature says about refugees fleeing war
Robert F. Barsky
From the Bible to "The Grapes of Wrath," reading classic texts of people seeking new lives can create empathy
Report from Ukraine: Tension rises as Russian war crimes revealed — what’s Putin’s next move?
Brian Karem
Putin may be targeting journalists — probably because he's about to push this war to a new level of bloodshed
The dangerous myth of American innocence: Only our enemies commit “war crimes”
Chris Hedges
America's massive hypocrisy makes a mockery of international law, and threatens to lead our planet to apocalypse
Kremlin propaganda disrupted by anti-Putin printer attack
Tom Boggioni
Hacking group "Anonymous" is sending statements that encouraging resistance to unsecured printers in the Kremlin
Russia’s war is an inexcusable crime — but the U.S. is not a credible force for peace
Norman Solomon
Russia bears sole responsibility for this ghastly tragedy — but decades of U.S. policy helped make it possible
Alexei Navalny, Russian opposition leader, quotes “The Wire” after 9-year sentence in “sham” trial
Igor Derysh
Dissident's trial was overseen by a judge who received numerous calls from Putin's PR chief before getting promoted
Report from Ukraine: Life goes on and spirits remain high — Putin wasn’t counting on that
Brian Karem
Lviv is flooded with refugees and Russian attacks continue — but Ukrainians understand their place in history
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