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Eleanor's Day

  • By
  • Jamie Holmes,
  • New America Foundation
October 10, 2009 |

Fifty-five years ago this weekend, Eleanor Roosevelt - described by President Truman as "First Lady of the World," by Vanity Fair as White House "reporter-at-large," by her son as "the writingest woman alive," and by contemporary historians as the "conscience of the New Deal" - was offered a basket of knitting materials.   

Charity Is an Insult to Small Business

  • By
  • Samuel Sherraden,
  • New America Foundation
November 24, 2009 |

Goldman Sachs, the most profitable firm on Wall Street, announced last week that it will set aside $500 million for "10,000 Small Businesses," a charity co-sponsored by famed investor Warren Buffett and devoted to helping small American businesses survive the economic crisis.

While Goldman may see this as a generous move, its charity is an offense to struggling entrepreneurs and a symbol of failed government policy.

Landing a Job Like Getting into Harvard

  • By
  • Samuel Sherraden,
  • New America Foundation
November 6, 2009 |
The 650,000 jobs created or saved by the stimulus package so far make up only a small step toward correcting the gap between the tens of millions of unemployed people and the few openings that those people are fighting over.

Even the administration's goal of creating 3.5 million jobs is far below what the economy really needs. With an official unemployment rate of 10.2 percent, the gap between the number of full-time job openings and the number of people who are unemployed has widened.

Former US official: Resignation Over Afghan War is Drawing Support | CNN

October 30, 2009
CNN terrorism analyst Peter Bergen disagreed with Hoh's assessment of Afghanistan. "It's not that our presence there is causing the problem," he said. ...

Pakistan Drone War Takes a Toll on Militants -- and Civilians

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • Katherine Tiedemann,
  • New America Foundation
October 29, 2009 |

The Obama administration has dramatically ratcheted up the American drone warfare program in Pakistan. Since President Obama took office, U.S. drone strikes have killed about a half-dozen militant leaders along with hundreds of other people, a quarter of whom were civilians.

As a result of the unprecedented 42 strikes by drone aircraft into Pakistan authorized by the Obama administration, aimed at Taliban and al Qaeda networks based there, about a half-dozen leaders of militant organizations have been killed.

U.S. Is Losing Afghan War on Two Fronts

  • By
  • Peter Bergen,
  • New America Foundation
October 26, 2009 |

We are losing in Afghanistan, on two fronts. The most important center of gravity of the conflict -- as the Taliban well recognizes -- is the American public. And now, most Americans are opposed to the war.

For years, Afghanistan was "the forgotten war," and when Americans started paying attention again -- roughly around the time of President Obama's inauguration -- what they saw was not a pretty sight: a corrupt Afghan government, a world-class drug trade, a resurgent Taliban and steadily rising U.S. casualties.

Afghanistan Haunted by Ghost of Vietnam | CNN

October 27, 2009
Peter Beinart, who recently wrote an article called "Bury the Vietnam Analogy" on thedailybeast.com, has said there is a real sense of national identity for ...

Key Democrats Push to Reverse Steep Physician Payment Cuts | CNN Political Ticker

October 20, 2009
... health care costs and would in fact make the deficit situation far worse," said Maya macguineas, head of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. ...

Democrats Push to Reverse Medicare Payment Cuts to Doctors | CNN

October 20, 2009
... care reform in order to get control of the fiscal challenges we face," said Maya MacGuineas, head of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. ...

Obama's 'Unclenched Fist' Won the Prize

  • By
  • Steven Clemons,
  • New America Foundation
October 9, 2009 |

Cynics will say that Oslo was jealous that Copenhagen, Denmark, scored a visit from President Obama, and giving him a Nobel was the only way to get him to Norway.

But the Nobel Committee's decision to make Obama the only sitting U.S. president since Woodrow Wilson to receive the Nobel Peace Prize shows the committee's clear-headed assessment that Obama's "unclenched fist" approach to dealing with the world's most thuggish leaders has had a constructive, systemic impact on the world's expectations of itself.

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