New York Times Magazine Unveils New Design with Old NYT Feature: Love of Leftist Terrorists

This Sunday, the New York Times Magazine will debut its redesign, and Michael Calderone at Yahoo News has a preview. The cover looks very much like the magazine’s cover looked 40 years ago, which is fine. But look beyond the visual and see if you can discern the subject of the cover story and the originator of its quote: “I Was Much Freer in Jail.”

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New York Times Magazine Unveils New Design with Old NYT Feature: Love of Leftist Terrorists

Must-Reads from Magazine

Can a Divided Nation Wage War?

House Speaker Paul Ryan has taken a beating from conservative activists for allowing an unsatisfactory omnibus budget bill to pass in his first weeks in office. Given the impossible alternatives, it was the right thing to do, but the discussion about his decision demonstrates the intense frustration of conservatives over their inability to restrain President Obama’s liberal project or meaningfully influence the direction of government even after winning control of Congress. But rather than sit back and play it safe Ryan may be setting himself up for another bruising battle that will win him few friends. By seeking to pass an authorization for the use of force in Syria, Ryan is again doing the right thing. But the almost certain failure of the effort will likely illustrate not only the divisions among Republicans but the distrust in the executive branch that the president has created.

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Leftism Absent Morality in Israel

Many who dedicate their lives to the resolution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict or fighting the injustice or terrorism that can arise from the conflict sincerely seek to bring peace and security and resolve a conflict which has been ongoing for more than a century, before both even Israel’s birth as a nation and the notion of the Palestinians as a distinct national identity separate from Syrians. That holds true for activists on the left and right who might have honest disagreement as to ultimate blame and the question of specific grievance — such as land dispute — versus ideology and religious intolerance and who also might disagree with the other’s cynical read of the ultimate goal of the other.

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A Bad Day for Preferred Narratives

Everything was going as planned at President Barack Obama’s Thursday evening town hall on gun control when the unexpected occurred. A woman, a mother, a victim of sexual assault in college, someone who according to the overly simplistic center-left perspective should be sympathetic both to Democrats and stricter gun laws, stood up and defended firearm ownership. It was a moment that demonstrated the fragility of narratives and stereotyping. It exposed just how rapidly worldviews predicated on a naïve and one-dimensional typecasting – a trap into which political demographers easily fall – can collapse. As it turns out, it was the beginning of a very bad 24-hour period for the consecrated and unfalsifiable belief structures preferred by the left.

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Not Too Late for Obama on Iran

Secretary of State John Kerry’s announcement this week that we may be only days away from implementation of the Iran nuclear deal was expected. Last month, the State Department coordinator for implementation of the agreement told the Senate that the U.S. was looking to lift sanctions as early as January even though Kerry told Congress last year that the earliest that would happen would be the Spring of 2016. But since Iran appears to be complying with some of the minimal demands contained in the deal, the administration is proceeding with must be considered indecent haste to declare success and begin ending the sanctions. For the president and Kerry the deal is an end unto itself and any other issue concerning Iran, no matter how serious, must be considered irrelevant and not be allowed to delay, let alone, halt the consummation of what they consider to be a diplomatic triumph. Yet even without rehearsing the powerful arguments that make it painfully obvious that the deal is a disaster, there are good reasons for delay.

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Did Obama Drop the Ball on NK?

In this era where foreign policy has become a political football, there is remarkable unanimity about North Korea. No serious politician on either side of the aisle believes that the North Korean regime is salvageable. Nor did President Barack Obama follow the path of his predecessors Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush (in the twilight of that administration) to lift sanctions and offer other concessions in order to try to engage Pyongyang. Indeed, while Obama and Secretaries of State Hillary Clinton and John Kerry reached out to regimes like Syria, Iran, and Cuba, and groups like the Taliban, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas, North Korea was a notable exception.

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