The Battlefields of Cable
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
For five decades, the agency has destroyed countless lives while targeting Americans for personal choices and peaceful transactions.
Many Democrats and Republicans were outraged when Trump and Biden respectively were found with classified documents. But both sides are missing the point.
What we can learn from the State of the Union addresses by Jimmy Carter in 1979, Richard Nixon in 1971, and JFK in 1963
Inflation is a problem for politicians. Unfortunately for them, it's not a problem they know how to solve.
Despite the abundance of transcripts, FBI reports, and memoirs from those involved, we still know more about the cover-up than we do about the infamous political scandal.
But 37 states allow medical or recreational use, and arrests are falling.
The former Texas congressman and presidential candidate says his goal was to get people to think about freedom.
The idea would benefit central planners and grow the ranks of bureaucrats while making the poor even poorer.
"Greed is constant. If it's greed, how do we explain prices falling?"
Friday A/V Club: Some people are against concentrated media power. Some just want to bend it to their will.
That time a civil rights activist teamed up with Richard Nixon to build a black-run town in rural North Carolina
Plus: The federal government gets a jump-start on celebrating Juneteenth, the masks come off in California, and more...
Friday A/V Club: How a Watergate burglar spent the '80s
He did not overpromise, and he had the good sense to stop talking about a country beset by violence when he ran for a second term.
Princeton political scientist Omar Wasow says violent protests helped Richard Nixon win the presidency in 1968.
Princeton's Omar Wasow talks about the complicated effects of civil rights demonstrations, police brutality, and racial fears on public policy.
From Clinton's cockiness to Reagan's contrition to Nixon's defiance, three different models for Donald Trump
He also likens impeachment to "domestic war."
Nixon's pursuit of draft-dodgers and pot smokers fueled the communist ideology it was trying to contain
Richard Nixon faced a primary challenger in 1972...and he squashed him like a bug.
Richard Nixon's battle with Timothy Leary puts today's culture wars to shame.
The 37th president used the then-stronger tools of media regulation to manipulate the far more centralized 1970s news industry in ways that Donald Trump can only fantasize about.
Some surprising insights and historical curiosities from past presidents at their one-year marks
The rhetorical war over the Justice Department's Trump/Russia investigation is beating a dead metaphor.
Their 18-hour miniseries looks at one of the most divisive, painful, and poorly understood episodes in American history.
Is this the only policy proposal Tom Paine, Huey Long, Milton Friedman, Timothy Leary, and Sam Altman can agree on?
Even Nixon released his taxes while under audit.
"I'm a Nixon guy," but the drug war "was Nixon's greatest mistake," Stone tells Reason.
Republicans for Lyndon Johnson, Democrats for Richard Nixon, and the prospect of a Republicans-for-Clinton campaign
Which occupant of the Oval Office flirted with anti-authoritarian ideas in his youth?
The man who revealed the White House taping system has some more revelations.
A new book shines some light on the violent radicals of the 1970s but misses their biggest impact on American politics.
"The cop with the girl under his knees does not see her as himself, which she is."
Rick Perlstein's new book shows the strange '70s interplay of skepticism and nostalgia.
It wasn't a national nightmare; it was fun. We can do it again.