Political History

Inside the Apocalyptic Soviet Doomsday Machine

  • By
  • Nicholas Thompson,
  • New America Foundation
September 28, 2009 |

Valery Yarynich glances nervously over his shoulder. Clad in a brown leather jacket, the 72-year-old former Soviet colonel is hunkered in the back of the dimly lit Iron Gate restaurant in Washington, DC. It's March 2009-the Berlin Wall came down two decades ago-but the lean and fit Yarynich is as jumpy as an informant dodging the KGB. He begins to whisper, quietly but firmly.

"The Perimeter system is very, very nice," he says. "We remove unique responsibility from high politicians and the military." He looks around again.

Intellectual conservatism, RIP

  • By
  • Michael Lind,
  • New America Foundation
September 22, 2009 |

On Sept. 18, Irving Kristol died. On Feb. 27, 2008, William F. Buckley Jr. passed away. Kristol was known as "the godfather of neoconservatism," while Buckley was the founder of the "movement conservatism" of Goldwater and Reagan. The intellectual conservatism that they, in different ways, sought to foster had passed from the scene before they did.

One Man's Rumor Is Another Man's Reality

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
September 28, 2009 |

Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that someone's not after you. Over the last few months, a lot of writers have dusted off Richard Hofstadter's classic 1964 essay on the paranoid style in American politics just so they can explain away the loony rumors and conspiracy theories coming from the far right. But no amount of intellectual condescension is going to make those powerful untruths go away.

The Secret Government

  • By
  • Christopher Hayes,
  • New America Foundation
August 26, 2009 |

It is now clear that we are facing an implacable enemy whose avowed objective is world domination by whatever means and at whatever cost. There are no rules in such a game. Hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct do not apply. If the United States is to survive, long-standing American concepts of "fair play" must be reconsidered.

Taking Back the House--The On-Screen and Real-Life Politics of Bill Cosby

  • By
  • Dayo Olopade,
  • New America Foundation
September 20, 2009 |

A "fan" of what he calls "The Obama Show," the Cos says if you can't be a doctor, at least be an electrician.

The Hawk and The Dove | Morning Joe (MSNBC)

September 23, 2009

The First Neocon

  • By
  • Reihan Salam,
  • New America Foundation
September 18, 2009 |

In Memoirs of a Trotskyist, Irving Kristol, one of the most daring and provocative American intellectuals of the 20th century, recounted his years as a young radical at New York's City College. What he recalled most vividly weren't the seminars and lectures that made up his formal education, but rather the mostly playful--but occasionally very heated-arguments that took place among friends in Alcove No. 1, a small corner of the dark and dank college cafeteria that was home to the anti-Stalinist left.

Walt Whitman's Answer to Joe Wilson

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
September 14, 2009 |

Go ahead, hit me with all the Tipper Gore jokes you want, but I'm beginning to think that U.S. political news, like rap music, needs a parental warning notification.

Every few years or so, we have a collective paroxysm over the bad behavior of this or that group of public figures. We fret over what the antics of sports stars or celebrities teach our children. Whether they're taking illegal steroids or partying without their knickers, we hope and pray that the kids won't mimic them.

Be More Like Teddy

  • By
  • Reihan Salam,
  • New America Foundation
August 26, 2009 |

Without Ted Kennedy's decision to back Barack Obama at a crucial moment, it is very difficult to imagine the young upstart defeating the Clinton machine, which had grown accustomed to grinding its enemies underfoot. Some said that Kennedy saw Obama as an heir to his family's political tradition. As a passionate and urbane liberal, Obama bore more than a passing resemblance to JFK. It took a long and painful decade for Ted Kennedy to surrender his own presidential ambitions, and he may well have seen his dramatic and fulsome endorsement of Obama as his last chance to restore Camelot.

Syndicate content