Issue: May/June 2013


Children of Color in the Persistent Downturn

At the peak of economic boom times in 2000, the U.S. child-poverty rate reached a historic low of 16.2 percent. Even then, UNICEF ranked the United States as having the second highest child-poverty rate out of 26 rich countries. The United States had a child-poverty rate twice Germany’s, five times Sweden’s, and nearly ten times…

A Shredded Safety Net

“I’m not concerned about the very poor. We have a safety net there.” -Mitt Romney, February 1, 2012 In 1996, the year that Congress passed and Bill Clinton signed welfare reform, fulfilling his campaign pledge to “end welfare as we know it,” there were 14.5 million poor children in the United States; 8.5 million children…

The Millennial Squeeze

It’s not Social Security deficits that are destroying the life chances of the young but a prolonged slump confounded by bad policies. 

A River Runs Through It

Everyone agrees that the only way to fix the Gulf of Mexico dead zone—the largest off the United States—is to fix the Mississippi, but not everyone agrees how. 

Ted Talk

The Tea Party doesn’t expect its politicians to get things done; it sends them to Washington to previent things from being done. 


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