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Loaded for Bear

Any day now the polar bear could be listed under the Endangered Species Act. Conservative groups are already plotting their response—and lawsuits are just the tip of the iceberg.
—By Daniel Schulman

Power Q&A: Stewart Brand

The Long Now futurist and founder of the Whole Earth Catalog talks about why it's time to rebrand nukes.
—By Kiera Butler

McCain's Pastor Problem: The Video

In a taped sermon, the preacher McCain calls a "spiritual guide" calls on America to see the "false religion" of Islam "destroyed." Still, the candidate won't reject Rod Parsley's endorsement.
—By David Corn

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Daily Jones

Dispatches from a Nightmare
From a Burma blogger: "No electricity means no water...People don’t know whether to pray for rain (no roofs) or not for water." More excerpts from the world press on Cyclone Nargis. —By Laura McClure

Put a Tyrant in Your Tank
You thought ExxonMobil was bad? Meet the new kings of crude. —By Joshua Kurlantzick

Clinton: Damn the Pundits, Full Speed Ahead
The morning after North Carolina and Indiana, the Clinton campaign signaled it would fight on. But her only real option is going nuclear. —By David Corn

The United States of Guilt by Association
Once upon a time there was a place quite inspiring, until a certain campaign did turn so conniving. —By Mark Fiore

What Next for Hillary Clinton
Tuesday night, conventional wisdom in the media seemed to congeal around the idea that Barack Obama is the Democratic nominee. That leaves Hillary Clinton with three options.  —By Jonathan Stein


 

When Is "Tough Love" Torture?
A new talk or behavioral therapy, even for children, can be introduced and sold by anyone without being vetted by any government agency. —By Maia Szalavitz

America Out of Gas
How rising oil prices are obliterating America's superpower status. —By Michael T. Klare, TomDispatch

Contractors Gone Wild
Theft, hookers, melting down Iraqi gold to make cowboy spurs—all in a day's work for private military contractors in Iraq?  —By Bruce Falconer

Politics, Pandering, and Policy at the Pump
And the winner of the Obama-Clinton gas tax battle is... —By Jonathan Stein

The Air Force Above All
We rarely stop to think of the asymmetrical advantages enjoyed by the military—the overwhelming advantage in firepower, mobility, and technology. This has created what can only be called an empathy gap. —By William J. Astore,

Mother Jones Wins National Magazine Award
Think Academy Awards, red carpet, black tie. In the magazine world, top honors come not as Oscars, but as Ellies, and they're awarded by the American Society of Magazine Editors. —By Elizabeth Gettelman

Photo Essay: The Dying Newsroom
After the latest round of layoffs left the San Jose Mercury News office empty as a morgue, a newspaper designer photographed what remained. 

Willie Horton Redux
An attack ad targeting Barack Obama raises a question: Can anyone with doubts about capital punishment, especially a black guy, become president? —By James Ridgeway

Endless War
Every time you hear the phrase "the next war"—and journalists already love it—you should wince. It means endless war, eternal war, and it’s the path to madness. —By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch

MoJo Convo: Pro-Nuke? Anti-Nuke?
We asked a futurist, a MoJo writer, a No Nukes activist, and a weapons security expert to debate nuclear energy this week. They are; join in. 

The Handcuffs of 1968
Forty years after the student protests at Columbia, that radical April day remains etched in memory. —By Glenn Frankel

Powering Down the Patriot Act
In the wake of another damaging report detailing the bureau's abuse of its data-gathering power, Congress is seeking to limit the use of national security letters. —By Brian Beutler, The Media Consortium

Rev. Wright: A Neverending Cross for Obama to Bear
Angry over his portrayal in the media, Jeremiah Wright is firing back in a way that it is politically harmful to the most famous member of his church: Barack Obama. —By David Corn

General Happy Swellspin
Don't worry, everything is just fine. Colonel Peachy Hunky Dory and General Okey Dokey have it all under control. A political cartoon. —By Mark Fiore

The Iranian Chessboard
Five ways to think about Iran under the gun, without the American filter in place. —By Pepe Escobar, TomDispatch

Supreme Court Upholds Voter ID Law
In the most high-stakes voting-rights case since Bush v. Gore, the Supreme Court cleared the way for Indiana's hotly contested voter-fraud law—and similar measures that could disenfranchise voters. —By Stephanie Mencimer

Clapping Along With Bush at the White House Correspondents' Dinner
While Washington insiders yukked it up with the president at the annual press corps prom, our man on the scene wondered why he didn't get the joke. —By David Corn

Scrubbing King Coal
Why are energy companies going gaga over alternative fuels? First off, let's define what they mean by "alternative."  —By James Ridgeway

Our New Energy Crisis
$100-a-barrel oil is in the rearview mirror, and no cost-effective (or even cost-prohibitive) alternative has emerged. —By Monika Bauerlein and Clara Jeffery

Book Excerpt: Standing Up to the Madness
As New Orleans demolishes public housing units, grassroots efforts among African-Americans have sprung up to rebuild the Lower Ninth Ward. —By Amy Goodman and David Goodman

John McCain on Katrina: Part of the Problem
McCain's Time for Action Tour reached New Orleans Thursday, where the Republican presidential candidate criticized the Administration and Congress for their response to Hurricane Katrina. But McCain's record shows that when it mattered most, he didn't act. —By Jonathan Stein

A Constitutional Conundrum
The House Judiciary Committee has taken its contempt of Congress fight to civil court, setting the stage for a legal battle that could redefine executive and congressional power. —By Brian Beutler, The Media Consortium

No Sex Please, We're Congress
At an oversight hearing on abstinence-only sex ed, Congress mostly shoots blanks. —By Stephanie Mencimer

The Seven Myths of Energy Independence
Why forging a sustainable energy future is dependent on foreign oil. —By Paul Roberts

America Decides Network
We decide what you decide. We know. You don't. A political cartoon. —By Mark Fiore

The Greenback Effect
Greed has helped destroy the planet—maybe now it can help save it. —By Bill McKibben

Congress' Top 10 Fossil Fools
Who stands between us and a clean-energy future? These guys. —By Chris Mooney

Out of Commission
An ongoing Senate deadlock over FEC nominees could mean the federal government's electoral referee is sidelined during the 2008 elections. —By Jonathan Stein

Clinton Campaign Blows Off the Weathermen Question
We asked (and asked and asked again) Hillary Clinton's spinmeister Howard Wolfson whether the candidate supported her husband's pardon of two Weather Underground radicals. He finally responded. Sorta. —By David Corn

The Nuclear Option
Instead of talking about environmentalists for nukes, or people posing as environmentalists for nukes, we should be talking about fission. —By Judith Lewis

Googling For McCain
Meet the Republican internet strategist who spends his days buying keywords. —By Casey Miner

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by Toastyoneuk

Htein Lin with one of his paintings made while in a Burmese political prison.

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reader comments

RE: Politics, Pandering, and Policy at the Pump: Who Wins?

Where I live, they waive the State sales tax for one weekend in August so parents can save a few dollars on the purchase of school supplies? So is my state 'pandering' to parents? No, they are just trying to help ease a financial burden. Is Hillary 'pandering' to voters or does she believe some action toward giving relief at the gas pump is desirable to inaction? The figure I have heard is that it would amount to several billion dollars in taxes over the summer months and that would be billions in the pockets of consumers. But given a choice between a person who is at least trying to take an action and a person who is not, I prefer someone who is trying to do something.

Posted by: Sharon Ash on 05/06/08 at 7:49 AM
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Porn Marketer Goes Solar

Having made millions from Match.com and Sex.com, Gary Kremen has an impressive record in spotting cash-crop trends. But his newest project, an attempt to "bring solar to mass market," may actually do some good in the world. Kremen's Clean Power Finance seeks to boost solar energy by linking installation contractors with financing.

And what about government incentives for solar? Tell congressional leaders how you feel about clean-energy tax incentives here.

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