
Who Cares What Army?
Though their time as a band was brief, the Monks represent a “what if” of the convergence between GI resistance and the 1960s counterculture.
Though their time as a band was brief, the Monks represent a “what if” of the convergence between GI resistance and the 1960s counterculture.
The United States has 800 military installations in dozens of countries around the world. They all must be dismantled.
Despite underfunding, the Veterans Health Administration is the United States’ largest health care system. And it could be the foundation of a truly socialist alternative to private care.
The GI Bill is proof: if people have access to education and the means to live, they’ll create meaningful art.
In 1992, the Cold War was over. But the Defense Department was already planning for the next one.
We journey to Indian-occupied Kashmir, where the cinemas have been turned into torture chambers.
Taking stock of the Democratic field on US empire.
Inside the fight against JROTC, a Pentagon program that targets working-class teenagers at public schools.
British politics have become a strange form of World War II cosplay, where the European Union are the Nazis, 1945 is a betrayal, and Boris Johnson is the newWinston Churchill.
For-profit colleges are making Wall Street firms even richer. Bush’s 2008 GI Bill helped make that possible.
Even for the United Nations, bombs and troops are increasingly the solution to problems created by an unjust global economy.
Your guide to military euphemisms.
We’re held hostage by a political and military elite that exploits us to fuel its endless wars.
Some of your favorite movies were probably made with help from the Department of Defense. Now we know which ones.
Because communication is at the heart of any good relationship.
On HBO’s new tragicomedy, a veteran plumbs the depths of his combat record for the stage — but ends up painting a portrait of middle-American desolation.
With its celebration of mercs rampaging through Africa, no healthy society could produce a magazine like Soldier of Fortune.
Working people knew the war in Iraq was a mistake — but they didn’t have a media to speak for them.
Eisenhower’s warning about the “military-industrial complex” marked an era when the American right feared militarism could bankrupt the country and plunge it into socialism.
Endless war … it’s good work, if you can get it.