Issue: After Bush: What the Democrats could–and should–do in 2009


Dying Did Not Become Her

David Rieff’s memoir of the terminal illness of his mother, Susan Sontag, shows the consolations of philosophy deserting her and the denial of truth sustaining her as death approached.

Reparations Anxiety

Brown University announced that it will give a $10 million endowment to local public schools to atone for its involvement in the slave trade. But reparations alone will not address the ongoing segregation of the American education system.

Pronouncing Our Own Doom

It’s strange that the incarceration rate is not as big an issue in the U.S. now as it was in Dostoevsky’s Russia, not to mention Dickens’ England. When will the United States wake up to the problem of our growing prison population?

Color, Values, America

Our next president must restore the United States as a nation of laws and of rights, rooted deeply in values. This effort must appeal to all Americans and transcend race — but cannot ignore race.

UpFront

Vegas as the new Athens; Mike Huckabee on bass; Larry Craig in Bali; T.A. Frank on what’s out and what’s in for 2008; and The Question.

The Democrats’ Strategic Challenge

If the Democrats win the election, can the next president and Congress make significant progress toward realizing liberal aspirations? Here’s how — a road map for the start of a new America.

Cool Warriors

The strength of postwar liberalism was not its tough stance against Communism but its deep, nuanced vision of American leadership. Thankfully, that vision is also held by today’s Democratic leaders.

Financing the Common Good

After three decades of government starvation of necessary resources, the next president needs to champion progressive taxation with the proceeds invested in social outlays that make for a more productive economy.

The Long and the Short

Covering the unfolding presidential race while also looking ahead to the challenges that will face the Democrats if they win the White House.


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