When Carl Sagan Warned the World About Nuclear Winter
Before the official report came out, the popular scientist took to the presses to paint a dire picture of what nuclear war might look like
A Year Before His Presidential Debate, JFK Foresaw How TV Would Change Politics
Television’s first iconic president was remarkably prescient on the subject of TV
Rare Roman Sundial Uncovered in Italy
Commissioned by a local politician, it sheds light on the relationship between Rome and its outlying territories
Syria Joins the Paris Agreement—the U.S. Now Stands Alone in Opposition
The announcement comes on the heels of Nicaragua agreeing to the accords
How the 1867 Medicine Lodge Treaty Changed the Plains Indian Tribes Forever
The peace agreement set up reservations for the tribe—only to break that agreement in the following decades
The “Unlikely Historians” Who Documented America in Protest
A new exhibit showcases photos and films that have long been stowed away in a basement at New York Police Department’s headquarters
U.S. Pulls Out of Unesco for the Second Time
Citing bias against Israel, the U.S. breaks ties with UN agency it helped found
This 17th-Century “Women’s Petition Against Coffee” Probably Wasn’t About Women, or Coffee
It probably wasn’t written by angry, sex-deprived wives–although stranger things have happened
The Civil War Draft Riots Brought Terror to New York’s Streets
This dark event remains the largest civil insurrection—the Civil War itself aside—in American history
The Story of Muckraker Upton Sinclair’s Dramatic Campaign for Governor of California
Sinclair was as famous in his day as any movie-star candidate who came later
How Agriculture Came to Be a Political Weapon—And What That Means for Farmers
In his new book, Ted Genoways follows a family farm and the ways they’re impacted by geopolitics
Since It’s 2017, New Broadway Play Plans to Keep Up With the News
From the creator of ‘House of Cards,’ ‘The Parisian Woman’ plans to capture the political zeitgeist of the moment
How JFK’s Clever TV Strategies Helped Him Win the Election
Seventy million people tuned in to watch America’s first televised presidential debate in 1960. They were met with a well-prepared, well-dressed JFK
How Many Ways Can Snake Venom Kill You and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
A Brief History of Presidential Pardons
The power bestowed upon the chief executive to excuse past misdeeds has involved a number of famous Americans
Gen Xers and Millennials Out-Voted Older Generations in 2016
It’s the first time the younger generations have beat out Baby Boomers, Silent Generation voters and Greatest Generation voters
The Author of ‘Robinson Crusoe’ Used Almost 200 Pseudonyms
Daniel Defoe honed his pen on political writing before he came to the novel
Why North Korea Needs an Enemy Like America to Survive
The nation’s complicated history hinges on three words that explain the totalitarian regime’s behavior
Where Did the Term “Gerrymander” Come From?
Elbridge Gerry was a powerful voice in the founding of the nation, but today he’s best known for the political practice with an amphibious origin
The Brief Period, 200 Years Ago, When American Politics Was Full of “Good Feelings”
James Monroe’s 1817 goodwill tour kicked off a decade of party-less government – but he couldn’t stop the nation from dividing again
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