Close
Close
  • SIGN IN to access the Harper’s archive
  • Need help?

SIGN IN to access the Harper’s archive

Close   X

ALERT: Usernames and passwords from the old Harpers.org will no longer work. To create a new password and add or verify your email address, please sign in to customer care and select Email/Password Information. (To learn about the change, please read our FAQ.)

Not a subscriber? Subscribe today!
Create a login here. Forgot password? Forgot email? More help here.

  • Subscribe
  • Current Issue
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • About
    • History
    • Contact
    • Masthead
    • Submissions
    • Internships
    • Advertising
    • Find a Newsstand
    • Media
    • FAQ
May 22, 2013: [Stockholm riots][Zimbabwe constitution][Eric Garcetti][Toilet paper windfall]
= Subscribers only. Sign in here. Subscribe here.

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Chile

Advance Search

Review — From the May 2013 issue

Open Happiness

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

No and the magic system of advertising

By J. Hoberman

Readings — From the September 2011 issue

Learning from Sting

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Ariel Dorfman

illustration — From the December 2010 issue

Untitled

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Fred Tomaselli (Artist/illustrator)

Weekly Review — May 27, 2008, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

President George W. Bush gave a radio address for Memorial Day weekend, invoking the sacrifice of 4,071 U.S. soldiers in Iraq and 432 in Afghanistan. Later, for the last time in his capacity as President, he placed a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.APBloomberg.comTen thousand Iraqi troops met little resistance as they took control of Mahdi Army-controlled Sadr City under the terms of a cease-fire agreement.Oil rose above $130 a barrel,APand Barack Obama won the Democratic primary in Oregon, while Hillary Clinton won in Kentucky.CNNPolitics.comClinton insisted that her candidacy was still viable. “My husband …

Weekly Review — November 28, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Rafil Kroll-Zaidi

“Into the palace parlor they stepped; her hand in his paw the old bruin kept,” 1875 Two hundred fifteen people were killed in a massive bombing and mortar attack on a Shiite neighborhood in Baghdad, marking Iraq’s largest single-day death toll since the U.S. invasion. The killings prompted Shiite militiamen to seize and burn alive as many as twenty-four Sunnis; other Shiite residents of the capital stoned Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. “It’s all your fault!” one man shouted.AP via MSNBCReutersElsewhere in Baghdad, insurgents set fire to a U.S. base, APand the host of a popular satirical Iraqitelevision show was found …

Weekly Review — January 24, 2006, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

In Iraq 30 people were killed at makeshift checkpoints, 22 people died in suicide bombings, 9 people were killed in an ambush, 5 bodies were found in the Qaid River, 4 children were killed by rocket-propelled grenades, and 2 American civilians were killed in a roadside bombing. Suicide bombings killed at least 22 people in Afghanistan and injured 30 people in Tel Aviv.Democracy Now!The Boston GlobeCRI OnlineSign On San Diego.comOsama bin Laden released a tape in which he warned of new attacks on the United States and offered a truce. “Your president,” said bin Laden, “is misinterpreting public opinion polls …

Weekly Review — May 24, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

Lost Souls in Hell, 1875. North Korea needed food.BBC NewsWal-Mart announced that it would export $18 billion worth of Chinese goods,Forbesand researchers in Singapore developed a system that allows people to pet chickens over the Internet.Wired NewsPakistan was working to stop bearbaiting,BBC NewsChina put a halt to the practice of using naked women for plates in sushi restaurants,BBC Newsand Warren Beatty was wondering whether he should run for governor of California.ABC NewsNew York was reviewing a law that allows convicted rapists to obtain Viagra through Medicaid,APand a parachutist died in a fall from the Eiffel Tower.News.telegraphKylie Minogue announced that she …

Weekly Review — March 15, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Paul Ford

A Christian martyr. In Iraq, the director of the al-Furat hospital in Baghdad was shot dead. A roadside bomb went off in Basra, killing a policeman, and two Sudanese drivers who work with U.S. forces were taken hostage.BBC NewsA gunman opened fire on a minibus filled with people working for a Kuwaiti company, killing one and wounding three, and a garbage-truck suicide bomb killed three people and injured more than twenty.BBC NewsThirty-nine dead bodies were found west and south of Baghdad; some had been beheaded, and others had been handcuffed before they were shot. Many were members of the Iraqi …

Weekly Review — January 25, 2005, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Margaret Cordi

Caught in the Web. Car bombers, suicide attackers, and kidnappers in Iraq were exceptionally busy, killing dozens to protest the country’s impending election,New York Timesand a video showed two Iraqis being beheaded for delivering food and supplies to an American base in Ramadi.CNNThe interim government announced that to minimize insurgent attacks, curfews would be extended, traffic restricted, national borders sealed for three days, and the locations of polling stations would be kept secret until the night before the vote.BBCThe Iraqi government arrested an ally of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi who was responsible for more than thirty car bombs since the invasion.BBCAl-Zarqawi …

Weekly Review — December 14, 2004, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Margaret Cordi

Doctors determined that the mysterious facial disfigurement of Viktor Yushchenko, the Ukrainian opposition leader, was caused by dioxin, a component of Agent Orange; his blood was found to contain over a thousand times the normal human level of dioxin, and someBBCspeculated that the poison was mixed into soup fed to Yushchenko during a dinner with the Ukrainian security service on the night before he became ill in September.The AustralianColin Powell and Russian leaders squabbled about each other’s interest in monitoring the upcoming Ukrainian election, andNew York TimesHamid Karzai was sworn in as Afghanistan’s first elected president.New York TimesMarwan Barghouti, the …

Weekly Review — August 31, 2004, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

Two government reports, one civilian and one military, were issued on the Abu Ghraib torture scandal. The Army reported that military intelligence officers and civilian contractors were deeply involved in the abuse; the civilian report went to great lengths to avoid the logical conclusion that the Bush White House had created the conditions (legal, operational, and military) that directly led to the Abu Ghraib horrors. Both reports found that many of the techniques employed at Abu Ghraib originated in CIA torture chambers in Afghanistan.New York TimesArmy investigators discovered that military police dogs were used to terrify teenage Iraqi prisoners as …

Readings — From the July 2004 issue

-O-u-r- man in Chile

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Weekly Review — June 1, 2004, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

Runaway Raft on the Tigris. President Bush unveiled his new “five-point plan” for Iraq during a speech at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and offered to destroy the Abu Ghraib prison if Iraqis want him to; the president also promised to give Iraq a modern prison system.New York TimesThe Bureau of Justice Statistics announced that 1 in 75 American men were in prison or jail last year, and itAssociated Presswas reported that interrogators from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, went to Iraq last fall and trained military intelligence teams at Abu Ghraib prison.New York TimesIyad Alawi, a doctor who has …

Weekly Review — May 11, 2004, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

Lost Souls in Hell, 1875. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld apologized for the torture of Iraqi prisoners and said that there are “many more photographs and indeed some videos” of American soldiers engaging in “blatantly sadistic, cruel, and inhuman” behavior; Rumsfeld took “full responsibility” for the abuse but still refused to resign. “It’s going to get a good deal more terrible, I’m afraid.” Specialist Sabrina Harman, who faces court martial because of her role in the torture, said in an email that she never even saw a copy of the Geneva Conventions until recently. “I read the entire thing,” she …

Weekly Review — October 14, 2003, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

Israel raided the Rafah refugee camp in the Gaza Strip and left 1,240 Palestinians homeless after demolishing up to 120 houses; Israeli officials said they had destroyed three tunnels used to smuggle weapons from Egypt. Eight Palestinians were killed in the operation, including two children.Associated PressAhmed Qurei, the new Palestinian prime minister, threatened to resign after Yasir Arafat refused to give him control over the Palestinian security forces.New York TimesTensions were beginning to surface publicly between Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser, over the creation of Rice’s Iraq Stability Group, which will oversee the chaos …

Weekly Review — December 3, 2002, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

United Nations weapons inspectors began their work in Iraq; among the first installations to be inspected were Al Dawrah and Al Nasr, two factories that Tony Blair and George W. Bush, citing satellite photographs, had claimed were sites of renewed production of nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons. Inspectors found nothing but ruins. Another factory (known as Al Furat) that the United States has cited as evidence of a nuclear weapons program was also inspected and showed no signs of illegal activity. It was reported that one of the weapons inspectors is the co-founder of Black Rose, “a Washington-area pansexual S&M …

Readings — From the April 2001 issue

Conspiracy theory

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Readings — From the April 2001 issue

Bodies of water

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Weekly Review — March 20, 2001, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

After a heavy lobbying campaign by the electric industry, President George W. Bush broke a campaign promise and decided not to regulate carbon dioxide emissions, humiliating Christie Whitman, his EPA administrator, and effectively killing the Kyoto Protocol on global climate change. The President said that he was worried about an energy crisis and that he wasn’t entirely convinced that global warming was real. OPEC decided to cut production by 4 percent in order to keep oil prices high. North and South Korea exchanged mail for the first time since the Korean War. Apparently offended by President Bush’s comments last week …

Weekly Review — January 16, 2001, 12:00 am

Weekly Review

By Roger D. Hodge

Liberal political groups were attempting to rally SenateDemocrats to oppose the nomination of John Ashcroft to be attorney general of the United States, though few seriously believed that members of the Democrat Party were brave or principled enough to do what it would take to defeat the right-wing Christian extremist.Afghanistan’s chief mullah decreed that encouraging a Muslim to convert to Christianity was a capital crime; Mullah Muhammad Omar also let it be known that selling any kind of anti-Islamic literature would be punished by five years in prison.An Iranian court sentenced several people, including a prominent journalist, to long prison …

Ajax Loader
More results

Get access to 163 years of
Harper’s for only $19.97

United States Canada

THE CURRENT ISSUE

Harper’s Magazine (June 2013)

June 2013

How to Make Your Own AR-15

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Dan Baum

Long Division

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Vanessa Gregory

The Separating Sickness

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Rebecca Solnit

view Table Content

Subscribe and get access to 163 years of Harper’s for $19.97

Subscribe Todays

12 issues delivered to your iPad, Kindle Fire, or Android tablet

Digital Subscription

FEATURED ON HARPERS.ORG

[Editor's Note]
Introducing the June Issue of Harper’s Magazine
Why the AR-15 rifle is here to stay,
the conspiracy theories of Room 237,
and more
By Ellen Rosenbush
[Perspective]
On Gun Control and Collective Rights
The firearm as emblem of personal sovereignty
By Dan Baum
“Let’s review our recent national paroxysm about guns, shall we?”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
[Report]
How to Make Your Own AR-15

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Dan Baum
“Even if federal gun-control advocates got everything they wanted, they couldn’t prevent America’s most popular rifle from being made, sold, and used. Understanding why this is true requires an examination of how the firearm is made.”
Illustration by Jeremy Traum
[Harper's Finest]
Gary Greenberg’s “Manufacturing Depression” (2007)

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

Wherein the author enrolls in a clinical drug trial
By Harper’s Magazine
“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science.”
Illustration by Ernst Kreidolf
[Report]
Broken Heartland

= Subscribers only.
Sign in here.
Subscribe here.

By Wil S. Hylton
“During the early 1990s, farmers throughout the Great Plains began to notice a decline in their wells. Irrigation systems from the Dakotas to Texas dipped, and, in some places, have been abandoned entirely.”
Illustration (detail) by Jeffery Smith

Ratio of military recruiters to college counselors at East Los Angeles’s Roosevelt High School:

5:1

SEPTEMBER 2002 > SEARCH >

Roosevelt High School (Los Angeles)

The majority of young Swedish women are attracted to both men and women.

APRIL 2010 > SEARCH >

“My body was quite happy,” said ISS mission commander Chris Hadfield. “I learned to talk with a weightless tongue.”

SIGN UP > SOURCE > MORE >

Close  X

Subscribe to the Weekly Review newsletter. Don’t worry, we won’t sell your email address!

HARPER’S FINEST

Article — From the May 2007 issue

Manufacturing Depression

By Gary Greenberg

“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science, and I’ve come to see how it’s done.”

Subscribe Today
  • Subscribe
  • Current Issue
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • About
  • History,  Contact,   Masthead,   Submissions,   Internships
  • |
  • Advertising,  Classifieds,  Where to Buy,  Media,  FAQ
  • |
  • Customer Care
  • |
  • Store

© 2012 Harper’s Magazine. Logo photograph (detail) by Nadia Shira Cohen.