- January 8, 2007
- American Roulette
In our winner-take-all casino economy, the middle class is getting royally screwed. A call to arms for populism, before it’s too late.
- December 18, 2006
- The Deniers’ Club
What good is the bipartisan commission’s new, last-ditch plan for Iraq if President Bush still has his heart set on victory?
- December 4, 2006
- The Lou Dobbs Factor
Fox is shrinking, while CNN has found a new way to lure viewers—by Foxifying itself. And Dobbs’s America won’t be ignored.
- November 13, 2006
- Oh, the Humility
We are now faced with an almost oxymoronic national challenge: to be a humble superpower—just as Bush suggested back in 2000.
- October 30, 2006
- Vanity Kills
Whether or not the L.A. Times gets rescued by Geffen, it needs to take a good, long look at who its readers really are. One hint: Not us.
- October 16, 2006
- Rape, Justice, and the ‘Times’
“I’ve never felt so ill,” says one reporter about the paper’s coverage of the Duke lacrosse-team case. Luckily, a blogger’s on the story, too.
- October 2, 2006
- The End of the World As They Know It
What do Christian millenarians, jihadists, Ivy League professors, and baby-boomers have in common? They’re all hot for the apocalypse.
- September 18, 2006
- Happyish Days Are Here Again
Democrats are gleeful about their November prospects, but they should be wary of winning the battle at the cost of the war.
- September 18, 2006
- Bright Sumner
Sumner Redstone’s surprise ousting of Viacom CEO Tom Freston may have looked crazy. But the octogenarian media mogul’s idea may still shine.
- September 11, 2006
- Humor Is the New Gravitas
What makes Katie Couric’s ascension to evening anchor significant is not that she’s a woman—it’s that she’s funny (and a woman).

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