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Billionaires fund candidates in both parties, pushing self-serving plans like austerity. That’s not democracy–it’s dollarocracy. JOHN NICHOLS explains – he’s Washington Correspondent of The Nation, and his new book is Dollarocracy: How the Money and Media Election Compex is Destroying America.
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Also: it was a historic day in Egypt, as the military removed Mohammed Morsi from power, the country’s first elected president. We have analysis from MARK LeVINE — he teaches middle eastern history at UC Irvine, and he writes for Al Jazeera English.
Plus: Hemingway Lives! CLANCY SIGAL says we ought to celebrate Hemingway’s passionate and unapologetic political partisanship and his attitude toward sex and sexuality, as well as his “stunningly concise, no-frills writing style.” Clancy wrote the classics Going Away and Weekend in Dinlock, and co-wrote the feature film Frida; his new book is Hemingway Lives!
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Plus: The greatest generation? After the WWII Normandy invasion, after the heroism and sacrifice, American GIs’ violent sexual assaults on French women horrified the French.
Fifty years ago — on June 25, 1963 — Federico Fellini’s 8 1/2 had its US premiere in New York City. It’s a transparently autobiographical film about a world famous director unable to finish his next film, beset by doubts, anxieties, and nightmares. As the film opens, our hero Guido, Fellini’s alter ego, played by Marcello Mastroianni, faces a dilemma that may be familiar to many: What if your deadline arrived, but you had written nothing? What if people came to hear you, but you had nothing to say? What would happen if you ran out of ideas?
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also: A secret army, a war without end–and a journalist determined to uncover the truth: That’s the story of the film 

Flying into Venice for a long-awaited vacation, the biggest thing we could see from the air was not the Piazza San Marco, or the Doge’s Palace, or the Basilica—the biggest thing in Venice was a cruise ship docked in the passenger port.
In the New York Times Book Review, there was “a mediocrity, and a lack of passion, character and eccentricity, a lack of literary tone itself.”
We win: Southern California Edison announced Friday it will shut down the troubled San Onofre nuclear power plant south of Los Angeles.
