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Showing results for: white supremacy (page 106)

Can 3-D save the movie industry?

Stephanie Zacharek
Filmmakers hail the technology as a new frontier. But the future looks a lot like the past.

Unchain the antitrust lawyers!

Andrew Leonard
The Obama administration reverses Bush policy and threatens to target would-be monopolists. History -- remember Microsoft? -- warns us to temper our enthusiasm.

America’s inhumane immigration inequality

Glenn Greenwald
Will Democrats finally end the travesty of forcing gay Americans to choose between their country or their partners?

Fox News “war games” the coming civil war

Glenn Greenwald
With Obama in office for four weeks, Fox convenes military and intelligence officials to analyze -- and call for -- violent upheaval against the tyrannical federal government.

Love in Brooklyn; death in Naples

Andrew O'Hehir
James Gray's dreamlike "Two Lovers" pairs a tormented Joaquin Phoenix with a bad-girl Gwyneth; ruthless mob drama "Gomorrah" makes Tony Soprano look like a lightweight.

Are you white enough?

Laura Miller
From Jim Crow laws to workplace discrimination, the history of race and the American courtroom is incendiary.

Our biracial president

James Hannaham
When the starry glow around his election fades, Obama will allow us to see ourselves in black and white.

I Like to Watch

Heather Havrilesky
Shiny, pretty people work hard to keep their stuff hidden, from the tragicomic celebrity stylist of "The Rachel Zoe Project" to the sleek but suffering suits of "Mad Men."

The dark history of burned flesh

Andrew Leonard
Drop those spareribs, imperialist pig-eaters! A new book argues that the great American barbecue smolders on the coals of genocidal racism.

Illusions of victory under Bush

Andrew Bacevich
How the U.S. wildly overestimated the use of military power in Bush's global war on terror.

Black and white in color

Andrew O'Hehir
An arch, acute and haunting documentary about the segregated Mardi Gras traditions of Mobile, Ala., "The Order of Myths" might be the nonfiction film of the year.

Jesse Helms is not dead

Michael Lind
His politics and his methods live on -- among liberals as well as conservatives.

Was Hillary channeling George Wallace?

Joe Conason
Hillary's reckless exploitation of racial division could split the Democratic Party over race -- a tragic legacy for the Clintons.

Wright’s theology not “new or radical”

Sarah Posner
Black religion expert Jonathan Walton on black liberation theology's roots in slavery, MLK Jr.'s "God damn America moment" and what Jeremiah Wright has in common with Gennifer Flowers.

The GOP on the verge of imploding

Sidney Blumenthal
A look at how radicalism has forced the Republican Party to retreat.

McCain apes Bush on Iraq, as Dems stand passively by

Gary Kamiya
His hard-liner stance should doom McCain with most voters, but unless Democrats put the war back on top of the national agenda, he might get away with it.

I Like to Watch

Heather Havrilesky
Crisis incites change, from AMC's alarmingly dark dramedy "Breaking Bad" to the History Channel's hilariously ominous special "Life After People."

Beyond the Multiplex

Andrew O'Hehir
12 films to watch for in 2008. Plus: An interview (and podcast) with John Sayles about his latest film, "Honeydripper," starring Danny Glover.

The ludicrousness of white cachet

Andrew Leonard
A Jaguar with an Indian accent? It simply won't do!

Battle of the Bushes

Craig Unger
The battle lines between father and son were drawn. In the balance hung policies that would kill and maim hundreds of thousands of people and change the global balance of power for years to come.

Bush’s stairway to paradise

Sidney Blumenthal
Hoping that history will somehow vindicate him, the president has entered a phase of decadent perversity.

Seizing American supremacy

Dilip Hiro
Throughout history, rising powers have overtaken superpowers. The United States will not prove an exception.

Bush and Cheney’s tortured secrecy

David Cole
Can the White House win a constitutional showdown with Congress over executive privilege after shredding the nation's trust?

The NAACP’s sad decline

Debra Dickerson
The venerable advocacy group changed history with its civil rights leadership -- so why does it seem to have lost its way?
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