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How DEI grew from civil rights struggles to corporate trend. A look at 100 years of effort, from Wilson to Biden, and why ...
Brazil is often where Russian intelligence officers begin their careers—adopting new identities before heading abroad. NV has selected the most compelling reports from leading Western media outlets.
Memories of racismBy Fred Malo, Jr.Carbondale Like most people my age, my short-term memory really sucks. I can’t remember ...
Timing is everything in politics, as Wilson discovered in 1910. It became the Democrats’ year across the nation, thanks in large measure to the Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act.
How did Wilson, whose racist statements made it into Birth of a Nation as epigrams, survive this great purge, while the mob sacked the likenesses of such diverse figures as Ulysses Grant, Frank Rizzo, ...
In “Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn,” Cox, former congressman and former chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, demonstrates that the 28th president was the nation’s nastiest.
Woodrow Wilson poses for a portrait in Washington. (AP) Arguments about past presidents shape the nation’s present understanding of itself, and hence its unfolding future.
Maybe not so surprising after all. Woodrow Wilson — idealist, author of the Fourteen Points, hero of the European masses after World War I — was all that, and more. Or, really, less.
"Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn," which will be released on Nov. 5, recounts the history of Woodrow Wilson’s racism and his opposition to women’s suffrage.
The Founders, the Pioneers, the Movement, the Lost Cause—the more driving myths one identifies, the more our true national character is obscured.
How remarkable to learn about Woodrow Wilson’s outrageous views in The Atlantic in 1901, the wonders of the Fisk choir, and the tears in the eyes of Lonnie G. Bunch III.