A trip through The Nation’s archives offers essential insights into why Republicans have long tried to weaken SNAP—and why they’re trying to kill it now.
In 1804, Ohio passed “Black Laws” that barred testimony, schools, and jobs for Black residents—proving freedom in the North ...
After Brown v. Board, White Citizens’ Councils spread across the South, using economic coercion to block desegregation.
A growing number of LGBTQ+ stories on screen are helping to combat the "straightwashing" of American history and push back against a wave of hate, said comedian and actress Margaret Cho.
From Lamar Smith in Mississippi to Harry and Harriette Moore in Florida, Black activists were murdered for voting rights.
In 1857, the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott ruling denied Black citizenship, upheld slavery, and stands as one of the Court's ...
As the shutdown enters day 36, it becomes the longest in U.S. history. Here's where Americans stand on Trump's job ...
On Friday night, when UCF takes the field against Houston in what’s being billed as “The Space Game,” there’s really only one ...
Twelve months after his election victory, the Republican president has suffered a bitter electoral defeat as he watches his ...
Frank Washington was making preparations to bury his aunt in a small family cemetery in the historic Virginia community of ...
American socialist, and Jawaharlal Nehru, a secular Indian nationalist, Mamdani signalled his pluralist worldview.
Mamdani’s win represents a seismic shift within New York Democrats and the party’s internal recalibration toward its ...
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