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Chuck Kennedy/White House/2009)
Though the Fox News Channel is often called a “biased” cable news station, “few dispute the journalistic orientation of the overall enterprise,” writes Eric Alterman. “This is a mistake. Fox is something new…It provides almost no actual journalism. Instead, it gives ideological guidance to the Republican Party and millions of its supporters…[It] functions as the equivalent of a political perpetual motion machine.”
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GOT DOUGH? Public School Reform in the Age of Venture Philanthropy
Joanne Barkan reports on how the Gates Foundation, the Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation have exerted influence on education policy in the United States. "A few billion dollars in private foundation money, strategically invested every year for a decade, has sufficed to define the national debate on education; sustain a crusade for a set of mostly ill-conceived reforms; and determine public policy at the local, state, and national levels." (Image: Bill Gates; Guety/Wikimedia Commons/2004)
CARLOS: The Terrorist as Poseur
CARLOS THE Jackal was for decades a symbol of international, left-wing militancy--not to mention "a secular, non-suicidal precursor of modern-day terrorism," as Leonard Quart and William Kornblum write. But as Olivier Assayas's film Carlos makes clear, "Carlos [was] committed to nothing more profoundly than being in control and asserting his own indispensability."
TALL TALES OF A REGULAR GUY
TONY BLAIR has claimed that the Labour Party suffered in elections earlier this year because it departed from the New Labour model. But, as Paul Thompson writes, Blair's new memoir shows little awareness of the political lessons of his public downfall: "In the end we learn more about Blair's personal journey than the transformation of British politics, or of the Labour Party." (Image: World Economic Forum/Wikimedia Commons/2008)
REBUILDING AMERICA: How Obama Can Still Turn Things Around
CAN THE United States achieve economic recovery with a divided government and a GOP opposed to further stimulus spending? Fred Block argues that "a bold plan to revive the economy could gain powerful support both in the public and in the business community...[W]hen it becomes apparent that the masses of people who support [such a] measure far outnumber the famous Tea Party activists, some Republicans would be forced to abandon the strategy of obstruction." (Image: National Archives and Records Administration/1930)
ONE STATE/TWO STATES?
IN THE Summer issue of Dissent, Danny Rubinstein described "the decline of the Palestinian nationalist movement," concluding that "the forces working against [a two-state solution] are many and powerful." In the Fall issue, Alexander Yakobson responds: "The true alternative to a two-state solution is not some binational fantasy but a single state that is Arab and Muslim: one state for one people." (Image: Justin McIntosh/Wikimedia Commons/2004)
STILL WAITING: David Guggenheim’s Manipulative and Short-Sighted Waiting for Superman
DAVID GUGGENHEIM'S latest film claims to take a serious look at "the state of public education in the U.S. and how it is affecting our children." "Though it purports to be a documentary," writes Ilana Garon, "Waiting for Superman in fact bears more resemblance to propaganda in its one-track exploration of the issues plaguing American public schools." And to Guggenheim, the "issues" are reducible to a single problem: bad teachers. (Image: Marlith/Wikimedia Commons/2008)
THE BROKEN MACHINE: The Story of the Great Recession
WALLACE KATZ reviews recent books on the economy by Harold James, Robert Brenner, and Raghuram Rajan. Together, their accounts show that current economic woes were decades in the making: "the growth fueled by thirty years of financial speculation and the export of manufacturing production abroad has resulted in inequality and unemployment or underemployment for ordinary people."
SYMPOSIUM: The Elections
DISSENT ASKED six of its contributors to write down their initial impressions of the midterm elections. Mark Engler, Todd Gitlin, David Greenberg, Feisal G. Mohamed, Christine Stansell, and Julian E. Zelizer provide explanations of how we got here-just two years after what some hoped was a liberal renaissance. (Image: Wikimedia Commons/2007)
BELLOW IN HIS DREAM CAR: An Interview with Benjamin Taylor
SCOTT SHERMAN interviews Benjamin Taylor, the editor of a new collection of over 700 of Saul Bellow's letters. Says Taylor, "Bellow's letters build up a picture of unbroken professional drive. And of longing for self-metamorphosis through his art....[He] did have some very formidable peers...But Bellow had more language in him than they did." (Image courtesy of Penguin)
PHILOSOPHY IN TEHRAN
AFTER INTERNATIONAL protest, UNESCO has decided not to hold its World Philosophy Day in Tehran. Ramin Jahanbegloo explains his opposition to the decision and explores how "reading philosophy in Tehran" can be "an encouragement to look for 'signals of humanity' in everyday experiences, but...also a way of saying 'No' to all those who want to use philosophy against its perennial responsibility, which is always to think critically." (Image: Raphael's School of Athens)
ANTICOLONIAL BEHAVIOR
LAST MONTH, Newt Gingrich claimed that President Obama was comprehensible only to those who "understand Kenyan, anti-colonial behavior." Paul Ocobock argues that this is more than mere race-baiting: "Ideas about colonialism...are central to Gingrich's own intellectual past....While we have no proof of Obama's Kenyan, anticolonialist mindset, there is in fact evidence of Gingrich's rather Belgian, colonialist worldview." (Photo: Mission School in Bolobo, Congo; Harry H. Johnston/NYPL)
HOW THE RIGHT BROUGHT DOWN ACORN
ACORN SPENT decades mobilizing poor Americans to better their communities and elect leaders who would advocate for them, but it only became a household name when the Right turned it into a punching bag. Writes Jack Clark, "ACORN proved powerful enough to earn the enmity of very powerful forces determined to destroy the organization, but not powerful enough to defend itself from these attacks." (Photo: Andrew Breitbart; Shal Farley/Wikimedia Commons/2009)
FOOD JUSTICE
A NUMBER of new advocacy groups have fixed their attention on food-a focus that brings together "those concerned with health, the environment, food quality, globalization, workers' rights and working conditions, access to fresh and affordable food, and more sustainable land use," write Robert Gottlieb and Anupama Joshi. These groups now "show promise of contributing to and inspiring a new social movement." (Photo: Steven Walling/Wikimedia Commons/2007)
FEDERALISM IN AMERICA: Beyond the Tea Partiers
THE RIGHT-WING federalists of the Tea Party propose "dismantling the central government as we know it," writes Gary Gerstle. In the face of electoral losses, the Left must assert that another federalism is possible - one which "would call on states to act in the public interest, and would seek to turn state governments into what the liberal jurist Louis Brandeis once celebrated as 'laboratories of democracy.'" (Photo: Sage Ross/Wikimedia Commons/2009)
TECHNOCRACY AND POPULISM
MANY ON the Left are frustrated with the piecemeal nature of the Democrats' achievements since 2009, and the slow rate at which they've unfolded. Conor Williams warns them against the trap of cynicism: "[T]he onus is on [progressives] to make their case more compelling. This will be unquestionably difficult in the current context...[T]he most necessary things often are." (Photo: Pete Souza/White House/2009)
PROSPERITY COMES FROM JUSTICE, NOT AUSTERITY
AUSTERITY POLICIES rule the day across Europe, and resurgent Republicans promise the same for the United States if they're elected in November. Daniel Greenwood argues against the faulty logic of austerity's proponents: "Dedication to making our fellow Americans miserable will achieve just misery. Investment, not penny-pinching penury, is the route to both greater justice and greater affluence." (Photo: Announcement of "Pledge to America"; House GOP/2010)
DECRYPTING THE WEB
OFFICIALS IN the Obama White House are considering measures that would make digitally encrypted information more easily accessible to federal law enforcement. Siva Vaidhyanathan argues that these efforts are misguided in multiple ways: "[S]uch policies would be intrusive to the innocent, a slight hassle for the guilty, expensive for all, and would give us a false sense of security-a description that applies to many post-9/11 policies." (Photo: Mike Pellegrini/Wikimedia Commons/2007)
CORN AND COUNTRY: Nebraska, Mexico, and the Global Economy
IMMIGRATION HAS become a defining feature of the governor's campaign in Nebraska this year. Julie Greene explains how corn helped bring this situation about: "Following Nebraska corn as it travels across the United States, to foreign countries like Mexico and back to meatpacking plants in Nebraska, illuminates the forces that made immigration a hot-button issue." (Photo: Blamfoto/Wikimedia Commons/2005)
BARACK OBAMA AND THE LIMITS OF PRUDENCE
IN A recent interview, President Obama lashed out at progressives who are "sitting on their hands complaining" with midterm elections weeks away. Thomas Meaney and Stephen Wertheim argue that president's anger stems from the tension between the electorate's "appetite for principled leadership" and Obama's prudential spirit. But for Obama's program to succeed, "even prudence calls for principle. It's time to present a vision for America." (Photo: Pete Souza/White House/2009)
ACCOMMODATING GENOCIDE: The International Response to Khartoum’s “New Strategy for Darfur”
WITH THE vote on self-determination for South Sudan mere months away, the international community has once again turned its attention to the country. Yet Darfur remains outside the spotlight, even as the Khartoum regime's menacing "New Strategy for Darfur" portends worsening violence. Writes Eric Reeves: "The New Strategy reads like an attempt to clear the ground for the final solution to the Darfur problem." (Photo: IDP camp near Nyala, South Darfur; USAID/Wikimedia Commons/2005)
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