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The attempt to cover up the police killing of Laquan McDonald in Chicago ought to end Mayor Rahm Emmanuel’s career, says Rick Perlstein, who reviews Rahm’s life in politics going back to the Clinton era and Obama’s first term.
Also: It’s the first anniversary of the attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Charb, the editor-in-chief, finished a manifesto two days before he was killed; we have comment from Amy Wilentz and Adam Gopnik—he wrote the forward to Charb’s book.
Plus: Dolpo Radio, with Rebecca Solnit—she went hiking in the remote Dolpo region of Nepal to help with a traveling medical clinic and to see what climate change looked like in the Himalayas.
A caravan of four Stanford football buses roars down Pico Boulevard with a police escort — in town for the Rose Bowl. I stand at the corner with a delivery guy from the Domino’s Pizza down the block — he’s an older Latino man.
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Also: JOHN POWERS reports on Canada’s popular new prime minister, Justin Trudeau, who has already welcomed Syrian refugees—and defended the Alberta tar sands. John writes about politics and film for Vogue and Vogue.Com, and is editor-at-large on Fresh Air with Terry Gross, where he has an audience of four million listeners.
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Also: guns in America: what is to be done? AMY WILENTZ comments—starting with her friend who keeps his guns under his bed.
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Also: TOM LUTZ reports on his trip to Minsk, in Belarus, just before the city’s greatest writer, Svetlana Alexievich, won the Nobel Prize for Literature for her oral history of Chernobyl.
Also: Rebecca Solnit explains the amazing Paris climate agreement, along with the not-so-amazing parts—and talks about the tasks facing the environmental movement now.
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Also: Joan Walsh talks about the real reason we don’t have gun control: far-right fantasies about Obama coming to take your guns.
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Also: The New York Times coverage of Bernie Sanders has been condescending—remember the page one story, “Bernie won’t kiss your baby”? AMY WILENTZ reviews the record — she’s a longtime contributing editor at The Nation, and she teaches Literary Journalism at UC Irvine.
If possessing two AR-15s and 2,500 rounds of ammo makes you a terror suspect, then we need to investigate several million Americans, most of whom are 