New perspectives on how history is made
This is a question feminists need to address.
Catholics usually vote for the winner. They did so this time as well.
It seems after every period of extraordinary progress, we witness a complete regression to the forces of reaction.
External circumstances and political calculations have a way of rerouting presidencies into uncharted territory.
Like Nixon, Trump may reap what he has sowed.
They’re riding to power on the backs of minorities who make easy targets.
Is Thanksgiving equal to the challenge this November 24? Some have simply called the whole thing off, staying put or reconstituting their guest lists.
Many Trump voters seemed ill-informed. Was that the problem?
The wave of anti-Trump protests that swept across America’s campuses after the election suggests that a new national student movement is emerging.
She ran away from her strongest argument that the economy had improved dramatically under the incumbent Democratic administration.
We wouldn’t get high marks for democracy, that’s for sure.
We’ll need it.
Trump’s supporters want to take back America, but which America and whose immigrants?
Global warming is our generation’s “gathering storm,” but not enough realize it.
This ugly part of the past cannot repeat itself on our watch.
History tells us that divided presidential election results typically lead to chaotic political results. Whether it will this time no one yet knows.
Obama may be on his way out, but like John Adams, there’s a lot a president can do in his final days in office.
Their battle with the establishment marked both as outsiders with whom Americans could identify.
While many aspects of the executive branch would be unrecognizable to the founding generation, the President’s selection of his own advisors would be.
It’s what happened to Iranians in the US during the Hostage Crisis. Now’s the time to remember it.
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