David Talbot

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  • Hail and farewell

    A message from David Talbot.
  • Where democracy refuses to die

    The media was pro-government. In much of the country, the election machinery was controlled by the ruling party. Voter fraud was rampant. But the people of Ukraine will not surrender.
  • Old times there are not forgotten

    John Wilkes Booth, the South's romantic villain, refused to accept the triumph of Northern values. Some things never change.
  • We won't give in

    One-party rule. One-sided media. Fight back with Salon.
  • That's what she gets for asking

    "Fresh Air" host Terry Gross talks about the famous people in her life -- and her strange encounters with Bill O'Reilly.
  • The mother of all coverups

    Forty years after the Warren Report, the official verdict on the Kennedy assassination, we now know the country's high and mighty were secretly among its biggest critics.
  • Don't mess with the Bushes

    In her new book, Kitty Kelley shows how the first family intimidates those who've tried to expose the clan's dark secrets of drugs, drinking, womanizing and nepotism. Now, she tells Salon, they're coming after her.
  • Prairie fire

    Garrison Keillor talks about why he is flamingly anti-Bush and pro-Democrat.
  • Condi Rice's other wake-up call

    Former Sen. Gary Hart says he, too, warned Rice about an imminent terror attack on two occasions before 9/11.
  • Creepier than Nixon

    The man who brought down Richard Nixon says Bush and "co-president" Cheney are an even greater threat to the country.
  • Smearing the messenger

    The Bush machine aims its poison darts at another military hero -- Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski.
  • The fog around Robert McNamara

    Director Errol Morris discusses how his Oscar-winning "The Fog of War" resonates with George W. Bush's foreign policy in Iraq, and the complicated morality of his film's star.
  • The Salon Interview: Daniel Ellsberg

    Like John Kerry, he returned from the Vietnam War to become one of its most famous opponents. Now the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers blasts the Bush camp's "obscene" attack on Kerry's patriotism.
  • The man who solved the Kennedy assassination

    It wasn't Earl Warren -- or Oliver Stone. His name is G. Robert Blakey.
  • Save the Earth -- dump Bush

    In a slashing interview, environmental leader Bobby Kennedy Jr. denounces the administration's "crimes against nature" and discusses the Democratic presidential pack, the dawn of Arnold's California reign -- and his own political future.
  • Investigate Bush! Subscribe to Salon

    A letter from editor David Talbot
  • "A true American hero"

    Joseph Wilson stood up to Saddam -- then to the Bush administration. The man who exposed the president's bogus uranium claim talks about why he spoke out and the White House's ugly "revenge" against him and his wife.
  • Letters

    Readers weigh in on David Talbot's "Why Dean and Franken Are So Hot Right Now" and Gary Kamiya's "Would You Like Some Freedom Fries With Your Crow, Mr. President?"
  • Why Dean and Franken are so hot right now

    After years of being kicked in the teeth by GOP bullies, Democrats have finally found two brawlers who know how to give it back.
  • "I shall not burn my press and melt my letters"

    Newspaper publishing in the days of Ben Franklin and his grandson was a filthy, grinding business. Fighting for freedom of the press was an even more wretched a task.
  • Brentwood bombshell

    At a meeting of Hollywood and progressive supporters in her West L.A. home, Arianna Huffington gets ready to run for governor. Her goal: Take Sacramento and shake Washington.
  • A president worth fighting for

    Sidney Blumenthal talks about his new tell-all Clinton memoir, the New York Times scandal bigger than Jayson Blair, why liberals shouldn't run from Fox News, and how Democrats can beat the Bushes.
  • Nader in 2004?

    It's the most divisive issue on the left. But some Greens now say we're in a "national emergency" -- and it's time to join forces with the Democrats to beat Bush.
  • Reagan blasts Bush

    "My father crapped bigger ones than George Bush," says the former president's son, in a flame-throwing conversation about the war and the Bush administration's efforts to lay claim to the Reagan legacy.
  • Are we safer now? Are we as free?

    Steven Brill talks about his new book, "After," and America in the "September 12 era."
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