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- 1From:The Washington PostByline: Jonathan S. Jones Eight months into its invasion of Ukraine, Russia is running out of soldiers, equipment and supplies. These shortages may soon leave Russia in an untenable military position. Morale has frayed...
- 2From:The Washington PostByline: Elizabeth R. Varon In an interview ahead of the House Jan. 6 Select Committee hearings, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., stressed the "extraordinary and unprecedented" nature of the 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol....
- 3From:The Washington PostByline: Meena Venkataramanan As the country celebrates Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, two states will observe a different holiday: King-Lee Day, which commemorates both King and Confederate general Robert E....
- 4From:The New York TimesThree hundred years ago, leaders of three British colonies and representatives of the Indigenous nations known as the Haudenosaunee Confederacy gathered in Albany, N.Y., to sign what is the oldest continuously recognized...
- 5From:The Washington PostByline: Joe Davidson Uncle Sam is in the curious position of supporting advocates for those who waged war against him. The federal government facilitates fundraising for an organization that celebrates Confederate...
- 6From:The New York TimesFor two months after the 2020 presidential election, Donald Trump fought to invalidate and overturn the results. When election administrators and judges refused to play ball, he urged his most loyal followers to march on...
- 7From:The New York TimesThe Confederacy built a lasting myth of victory out of defeat. Trump and his followers may, too. One hundred and fifty years after the emergence of the Confederate Lost Cause ideology, a new Lost Cause invaded the...
- 8From:The Washington PostByline: Alan Taylor In our polarized times, talk of secession blooms on the losing side of bitterly contested national elections. After the 2016 election, some liberal Californians proposed a referendum to seek...
- 9From:The New York TimesNASHVILLE -- There was a time when ancestor worship was almost obligatory in the South. The tiniest rural community, hardly more than a red-dirt crossroads, had its own graveyard, and those graves were never short of...
- 10From:The Washington PostByline: Stephen Marche When Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., talks about a "National Divorce," as she did again in a tweet on Wednesday, she may be advancing the cause of secession or she may just be seeking...
- 11From:The Washington PostByline: Nick Anderson One Virginia community college is dropping from its name John Tyler, the 10th president of the United States who backed the Confederate rebellion before he died. Another is ditching Thomas Nelson...
- 12From:Washingtonpost.comByline: Courtland Milloy At the Robert E. Lee-Stonewall Jackson Day luncheon in Lexington, Va., this past weekend, I was surprised by the level of attention that was paid to racial issues. The all-white crowd --...
- 13From:The Washington PostByline: Shibani Mahtani and Theodora Yu HONG KONG - Tony Chung, a young activist who called for Hong Kong's independence from China, was sentenced to three years and seven months in prison on Tuesday after pleading...
- 14From:Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)Byline: FRANK CHING Lead Hong Kong-based journalist Hong Kong, which has prospered for decades as the gateway between China and the West, today serves as a common punching bag for both. The Standing Committee of...
- 15From:Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)Byline: MICHAEL BOCIURKIW Lead Global affairs analyst and former reporter with the South China Sunday Morning Post It was a surreal experience, to wander among a major protest in Hong Kong's central district last...
- 16From:The Washington PostByline: Donna Cassata WASHINGTON - House Democrats on Tuesday killed a Republican resolution that would have effectively banned the Democratic Party or any political organization for its past history of supporting...
- 17From:The New York TimesRegional partnerships may offer a new framework for dealing with urgent issues on which Washington has failed to lead. Three groups of governors in the East, West and Midwest announced that they would work together...
- 18From:The Washington PostByline: Paul Farhi Rush Limbaugh isn't saying he wants the country to split into red and blue factions as a result of conservative fury over the election results. As he attempted to make clear Thursday, he's just...
- 19From:The New York TimesThe idea of an agile ''Global Britain'' was an effective sales pitch. But that was before President Trump and other populists began erecting barriers to trade. LONDON -- It took 11 grueling months for negotiators...
- 20From:Washingtonpost.comByline: Jeremy Tewell Last night, Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith won the runoff election for her Mississippi Senate seat, despite controversial statements that left her struggling against charges of racism in the...