Newsweek

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  • O'Reilly's jihad against the L.A. Times

    Fox News' finest calls for terrorists to behead the paper's editorial page editor.
  • How Newsweek's sneak peek failed

    In what looks like a case of CBS syndrome, the magazine allowed a Pentagon official to read its Quran-abuse story -- all of it -- prior to publication.
  • Religious abuses at Gitmo

    More evidence as to why Newsweek's blunder doesn't debunk the greater mess of allegations about mistreatment of detainees -- religious coercion included -- at the U.S. military prison.
  • Wrong and right

    Newsweek clearly erred in its sourcing, but the White House is committing a far greater sin in ignoring the overwhelming evidence of U.S. abuse of Muslim detainees.
  • Newsweek tells its own story

    The magazine's blunder was a big one, and any argument in its own defense merits some skepticism. But it's spot on about the greater backdrop for the Islamic world's violent reaction.
  • Newsweek isn't the problem

    The Bush administration and its media allies are trying to use one inadequately sourced story to make the torture and abuse scandal go away. They can't get away with it -- can they?
  • The biggest cost of Newsweek's blunder

    It turns Gitmo into a circus-of-a-media story, rather than one about the long-term pattern of abuses inside the Bush administration's secretive system of military prisons used in the war against terrorism.
  • Newsweek retracts, but where are the facts?

    Did interrogators really flush the Quran? Did the magazine's article really spark riots?
  • The bigger story on Quran abuse at Gitmo

    Newsweek's blunder aside, numerous past stories revealed that the Quran was abused by interrogators at the U.S. military prison in Cuba.
  • The accountability moment

    The White House says Newsweek hasn't apologized enough. When are Bush and Cheney going to start?
  • The media gives Bush a mandate

    Falling to its knees in record time, the press predicts the president will be a uniter this time -- really.
  • Newsweek's grand inquisitor

    When Howard Fineman asked Dean if he believes Jesus Christ is the son of God and the route to eternal life, campaign reporting reached a brand-new low.
  • "A Season in Bethlehem" by Joshua Hammer

    April 2002, the Church of the Nativity, Bethlehem. Palestinians inside, Israelis outside. It was a gripping 39-day standoff that seemed to symbolize the entire Middle East conflict.
  • Sanitized for our protection

    The rest of the world is shown far more graphic war images than the U.S. media allows. Is the American public being insulated from the true horrors of the battlefield?
  • Between a Rick and a hard place

    As Rick "I'm going to make you so happy" Rockwell rocks Fox's world, Jenny "I'm a little hottie!" McCarthy rocks Kirk Douglas' lap.
  • Shooting truth in the back of the head

    Here's what the Russian government doesn't want you to know about the war in Chechnya.
  • Cyberslacking epidemic

    Are companies losing billions of dollars to recreational surfing and e-mail chitchat?
  • Letters to the Editor

    Are 13-year-olds ready for "hand jobs and heavy petting"? Plus: "Weird Weekends" host talks back; it's time for minorities to rethink party loyalties.
  • Freudian fear and cooked statistics

    The recent media alert about sex-crazed "tweens" is mostly a lot of hoo-ha with naught behind it.
  • Teen girls not in a rush

    Four random but not randy "tween" girls talk about boobs, boys and sex -- and why they're not in a hurry to have any of it.
  • Anna Quindlen joins Newsweek

    Her first column is a distinctive blend of clichis and conventional wisdom.
  • Reagan biographer bites back

    Edmund Morris answers his critics in an online chat.
  • Stalking Gates

    In "The Plot to Get Bill Gates," Gary Rivlin provides a much-needed outsider's view of the Baron of Redmond -- and the rogues of Silicon Valley.
  • Crying wolf

    Ellis Cose's Newsweek cover story set out to celebrate America's racial good news. So why did it wind up singing the same old despairing song?
  • Look out Limbaugh! Get this woman a radio talk show

    Arizona state Rep. Barbara Blewster spews racist remarks; another nutty theory on who shot J.F.K.; Congress takes on soda pop.
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