Michelle Goldberg

⇐ newest Page 2 of 11 oldest ⇒
  • One nation, divisible

    Do evangelicals and secularists want the same America? Legal scholar Noah Feldman says yes, and he has a plan for a more perfect union. Too bad it will never work.
  • The right to impose Christianity

    The religious right worked itself into a righteous fury at "Justice Sunday," using the stalemate over judges to tar Democrats as enemies of God.
  • Sexual revolutionaries

    "Persepolis" author Marjane Satrapi talks about why Iranians don't think sex is sinful, the hypocrisy of American saber-rattling over Iran, and why George Bush and the mullahs are "the same."
  • In theocracy they trust

    Christian right leaders denounced separation of church and state and prayed for a judge's deliverance to Satan. And their Capitol Hill allies were right there with them.
  • Among the believers

    At the Conservative Political Action Conference, where rabid Bush-worshippers learn that liberals hate America and that we really did find WMD in Iraq.
  • A dispatch from the culture war

    Gay Arkansans protest Gov. Mike Huckabee's hetero-only "Celebration of Marriage."
  • The new Monkey Trial

    By persuading the Dover, Pa., school board to teach creationism, Christian zealots have provoked a showdown over the status of not just evolutionary theory, but science itself.
  • More relief for struggling millionaires

    If you thought the current Bush tax rate rewarded the wealthy, wait until you get a load of his administration's latest plan.
  • If at first you don't secede

    Feeling they've lost any say in how the nation is run, liberals are turning to an unfamiliar philosophy: States' rights.
  • Joyful and triumphant

    The religious right is in heaven at the prospect of remaking the Supreme Court.
  • Stars try to shine the way in Ohio

    Paul Newman, Steve Buscemi, Matt Dillon and a cast of dozens dazzle Cleveland with a door-to-door drive to get out the vote.
  • Down with the Kerry haters

    Outside the Bush-Arnold rally in Ohio, Republicans railed at demonstrators with apocalyptic fury.
  • GOP's worst fears coming true

    An influential Republican pollster concludes that a big minority turnout will tip the battleground states to Kerry.
  • Eminem's anti-Bush anthem

    Watch the "Mosh" video, the most powerful broadside against the administration since "Fahrenheit 9/11."
  • "Homosexuals are hellbound!"

    Churches in Ohio are rallying their massive flocks behind the most strident anti-gay marriage amendment in the nation -- and the Republican National Committee is in heaven.
  • "Bush lied, my son died"

    In excruciating new TV ads, family members of soldiers killed in Iraq speak out about the horrible waste of their loved ones' lives.
  • Marine declares war on Bush

    Iraq war veteran Steve Brozak is running hard for Congress. And he's turning his campaign into a referendum on Bush's military folly.
  • Flicks for the far right

    At the inaugural American Film Renaissance festival, conservative moviemakers take feeble aim at Hollyweird -- and arch-nemesis Michael Moore.
  • They fought the law and the law won

    Anti-Bush protesters were tough and resilient all week. But in the end it was the NYPD and City Hall with the upper hand.
  • Gotham rebels

    While platitudes ring out at the GOP Garden party, protesters -- from Iraq Veterans Against the War to activists in Bill O'Reilly masks -- fan out across the city. Police crack down with handcuffs, nets and mass arrests.
  • Poor and proud

    Cheri Honkala's diverse group of anti-Bush marchers arrives in New York, declaring that homelessness is a societal, not a personal, failing.
  • "We the people say no to Bush"

    Hundreds of thousands of protesters filled the New York streets Sunday. Clash songs blasted, anarchists taunted "Aida"-goers, and moms, queers and Wall Street bankers told the Bush administration it must go.
  • The whole world is watching

    If militants violently disrupt the GOP convention, it could be Chicago 1968 redux -- and Christmas in August for the Bush campaign.
  • New York lockdown

    Cops plan zero tolerance for violent protests at the GOP Convention. Militant groups plan to disrupt the city like never before. Welcome, delegates!
  • Down and out and on the move

    Leading a feisty army of homeless people, fiery activist Cheri Honkala is about to descend on the Republican Convention.
⇐ newest Page 2 of 11    oldest ⇒

From Salon's blogs