Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Monday 26 May 2014

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University Presidents Are Laughing All the Way to the Bank While the People Who Work for Them Are on Food Stamps

by Lawrence S. Wittner
The lucrative nature of these positions appears to have had little to do with the intellectual distinction of the universities.

Truth in a Lie: Forty Years After the 18½ Minute Gap

by James D. Robenalt
An axiom among lawyers is that people who are lying radiate strong clues, if one is trained to spot them.

Let’s place Edward Snowden in the Context of History

by Paul E. Ceruzzi
Historians have been remiss in placing the Snowden story in historical context in part because of the curious way that the history of computing as a discipline evolved.

Islamism with a Human Face?

by Daniel Pipes
Until now, Islamist rule has implied violence and dictatorship; can it evolve into something decent?

Why the Second World War Never Ended for Ukraine

by Juliane Fuerst
Acknowledgement of imperfect pasts on both sides of Ukraine might generate a bit more understanding for the complexity of individual motivations.

25 Years Later: What Have We Learned About China Since the Tiananmen Square Massacre?

by Dr. Joe Renouard
How human rights and democracy have become elements of conflict in Sino-American relations.

What Would George Kennan Say About Ukraine?

by Geoffrey Roberts
“We must be gardeners and not mechanics in our approach to world affairs” -- George F. Kennan

Remembering My Parents on Memorial Day – The Forgotten Few

by Jonathan Husband
"Had there been no World War II I would not be here to tell my story..."


You Know Jackie Robinson, but Shouldn't We Remember Moses Fleetwood Walker, too?

by Michael H. Ebner
Moses Fleetwood Walker should not be regarded as a trivial footnote.

Why Colombian Peasants Are Again in Revolt -- And What's Different this Time

by Jason McGraw
Juan Valdez is mad as hell and he’s not going to take it anymore.

Review of Sherry L. Smith's "Hippies, Indians, and the Fight for Red Power"

by Ron Briley
Rather than simply focusing upon the excesses of the movement which degenerated into the Rolling Stones Altamont concert and the bloody murders of the Manson family, Smith chooses to emphasize the positive legacy of the counterculture’s interest in Native American history and culture.

Review of Bruce Dancis’s “Resister: A Story of Protest and Prison During the Vietnam War”

by Murray Polner
Dancis and many in his like-minded allies once believed they could bring about permanent, serious and nonviolent change.

Motown: the Musical and Its ‘60s History Headed to Motown the City

by Bruce Chadwick
The play is a marvelous, foot stomping look at the history of the rock music business through the eyes of Gordy, who wrote the book of the play based on his autobiography.

Edgar Allan Poe Is Turning Over in His Grave

by Bruce Chadwick
The play is, in its finest moments, underwhelming.


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Roundup Top 10!

This week's broad sampling of opinion pieces found on the Internet, as selected by the editors of HNN.