Roundup Top 10!
Most people think ‘whiteness’ is innate. They’re wrong: It was created to keep black people from voting.by Katharine GerbnerWhen slaves got close to voting rights, slaveowners changed the rules of the game. |
A Century of Feuding Between Presidents and the Pressby Julian E. ZelizerYears before it began its annual dinner, the White House Correspondents’ Association started as an effort to hold the president accountable to the press—a mission as urgent as ever. |
U.S. Soldiers Might Be Stuck in Korea Foreverby Clint WorkAs Trump has already discovered, pulling the military from the Peninsula isn't easy. |
Trump needs to study up on North Korea's history of duplicityby Cal ThomasA good place to start is an essay written by Joshua Muravchik of the American Enterprise Institute for the March 2003 issue of Commentary magazine. |
How does Congress have chaplains without violating the separation of church and state?by Wendy Cadge and Laura R. OlsonAnd why does the U.S. Congress employ chaplains? And just what do they do? |
It’s right to condemn Mahmoud Abbas for his antisemitic remarksby Jonathan FreedlandSupporting someone’s cause also means calling them out when they are wrong. The Palestinian leader’s views on Jews and the Holocaust are unacceptable. |
Asperger's Syndrome, the Nazi Regime and the Dangerous Power of Labeling Peopleby Edith Sheffer"I was excited to write a positive book about autism and the Third Reich. My first day in the Austrian National Archives in Vienna, however, dispelled any notion of a heroic tale." – Edith Sheffer |
A Jewish Writer Kept a Secret Diary During the Nazi Occupation of Franceby David BallIt Offers an Important Lesson About History |
My Secret Summer With Stalin’s Daughterby Grace Kennan WarneckeIn 1967, I was in the middle of one of the world’s buzziest stories. |
Learning the History of Lynching Helped Heal My Woundsby Issac J. Bailey"I’ve learned you can’t cure a disease you refuse to acknowledge, and it was not until recently that I myself did so fully." |