Liberals used to think that “civil society” would flourish thanks to the development of free enterprise, and the function of the state would correspondingly be reduced until it was merely supervising humanity’s spontaneous evolution. Marxists more optimistically thought the century …
A small, barefoot, ragged little man, handcuffed between two policemen, was proceeding by fits and starts along the dusty deserted street, as if to the rhythm of a painful dance, perhaps because he was lame or wounded in the foot. Between the two uniformed figures, …
Charging that desegregation of schools causes “white flight,” the neoconservatives have now joined the fight against large-scale integration of big-city school systems. The signal for the attack was James S. Coleman’s recent repudiation of his findings that had for some …
We are not likely to have a critic on the scale of Edmund Wilson ever again. He taught modernism, American literature, and “the writing and acting of history” to three generations of readers, and if his example as a journalist …
Unless quantitative social research is tempered with common sense, it may obscure rather than illuminate social reality, which accounts for its oft-deserved reputation for sheer irrelevance. Unfortunately, the recent article by James Wright and Richard Hamilton (“Blue Collars, Cap and Gown,” Spring 1978) is a model …
I. Are Limits to Growth Real? Since 1945, rapid growth of gross national products has been the chief goal of Western governments. It has been the basis of the welfare-state compromise, the answer to class tension and to demands for social justice in the …
The first appearance of the new definition of woman was not intended to disrupt family life. The writing of Betty Friedan, the first Statement of Purpose of NOW, the findings of Masters and Johnson, and even the recipes in The …
There, are people in Washington who say that the present Congress is the worst in memory. “Worst” is a big word, of course, like “forever” and “never,” and there may be little profit, except for the historian, in the analysis of past Congresses to …
T he struggle over busing has become almost as familiar a feature of our social landscape as was the Vietnam war in the late 1960s or the civil rights movement a bit earlier. But there are significant differences. One is that the civil rights and …
The main casualty of Proposition 13 within California— and perhaps without—is the dominant politics of the last 40 years. Welfare-state liberalism has almost vanished from the state’s political spectrum. The welfare state itself still limps along, more feebly than before, but without benefit of audible defense. …
Recent events in Cambodia, even if reports exaggerate the magnitude of killings and enslavement, are so terrible that a number of commentators have seized upon them to call into question the validity of opposition to the American role in Vietnam. The argument made …
On Socialist Thought Editors: Dissent is to be commended for publishing Robert Heilbroner’s essay and the critical responses to it. The essay and the various responses go to the heart of some of the most troubling aspects of the socialist tradition. It seems to …
Professor Cuddihy thinks that the tradition of a Judeo-Christian religion is a pious but viciously conceived myth and that the “lachrymose history” of Jewish persecution in the Middle Ages has been invented to conceal the fact that the Jews were …
With the 54-day stand-off that stretched from the kidnapping to the murder of Aldo Moro, the strategists of the terrorist warfare, which for years has been bloodying Italy, set themselves a double objective. First: to put the hostage on trial, both as a person and …
A curious feature of Solzhenitsyn’s Commencement Speech at Harvard (National Review, July 7, 1978) is its attack on freedom of the press. The untoward liberties that American journalists are known to take have been shocking to Solzhenitsyn, and he responds with something between petulance and indignation. …