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Mother Jones4 min read
Data Blockers
IN EARLY MAY 2022, reproductive health researcher Liz Mosley was at a dinner celebrating her first day as an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine when the news broke: A leaked draft of the Dobbs decision revealed the
Mother Jones7 min read
The Good Wife
LAST YEAR, despite minding other people’s business online, I didn’t know what a “trad wife” was. Now it seems like every time I log in to Instagram or TikTok, there is another video of a beautiful woman cleaning her home or making an extraordinarily
Mother Jones5 min read
White Man’s Burden
LAST SEPTEMBER, when the Biden administration canceled several oil and gas leases in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, it cited in its decision the expertise of the Native “original stewards” of the land. The move was the fruit of government-
Mother Jones21 min read
The Conversion Therapist Will See You Now
THE CONVERSION therapists met last November at the south end of the Las Vegas Strip. Behind the closed doors and drawn blinds of a Hampton Inn conference room, a middle-aged woman wearing white stockings and a Virgin Mary blue dress issued a call to
Mother Jones5 min read
Church and Statehood
ON A WARM January evening, mayoral candidate Wanda Arzuaga López makes her way through Juncos, Puerto Rico, visiting a neighborhood of 1940s-style casitas and breadfruit trees sitting behind chain-link fences. Joined by her campaign director and four
Mother Jones3 min read
Genocide
ISRAEL DECLARED its independence in 1948. That same year, the United Nations adopted the convention that defined genocide as a crime. The tension between these two “never agains” was there from the start. The word “genocide” was coined in 1941 by Rap
Mother Jones50 min read
“I Hope My Hindsight Will Be Others’ Foresight”
along the coastal 101 in brilliant blue, the bright May sky beginning to soften toward sunset. Chin Rodger felt a lift of optimism as she exited the freeway and arrived at a sushi restaurant tucked away in the tony town of Montecito, where she greete
Mother Jones1 min read
Hall of Blame
• Ron DeSantis is “sullen and sad, because his numbers are as tiny as him.”• “In another desperate sign that his campaign is off the rails, DeSanctus had the bright idea to travel to Los Angeles to do Bill Maher’s show where he was filleted like he w
Mother Jones11 min read
Raging Bull
IN LATE FEBRUARY, after Donald Trump had nearly vanquished the entirety of the Republican primary field, his spokesman, Steven Cheung, took aim at the one opponent still standing. “Birdbrain, are you a liar or just plain stupid?” he posted on X. “Bir
Mother Jones8 min read
What We Are Owed
ALVIN TAYLOR still remembers the sight each day as he’d return from school, of more houses in his neighborhood being burned to the ground. He was about 8 years old when the fires came for his home. Fenita Kirkwood recalls listening, as a 9-year-old g
Mother Jones3 min read
Saved
GROWING UP, Myles Markham always felt like an outsider. Markham was multiracial in small, mostly white Florida towns. And they were queer. “I was swimming in water that told me that who I was, what I was, needed to change if I wanted to be safe,” the
Mother Jones2 min read
No Quarter
IT’S HARD TO summarize the poignancy, vulnerability, and harrowing beauty of Another Word for Love, a new memoir by journalist Carvell Wallace that mixes vignettes of his hardscrabble journey from boyhood to middle age with ruminations on culture, fa
Mother Jones3 min read
Growing Pains
WHEN I SPOKE with Mandi Remington in late January, she had just seven bucks left in her bank account and she’d run out of milk. Toward the end of most months, Remington told me, she’ll feed her three children and then make her own dinner from whateve
Mother Jones7 min read
Paradise Stolen
KAREN DOVE BARR parked her cart next to a “Golfers Only” sign. Up ahead, men in khaki shorts and polo shirts leaned on golf clubs around the 12th hole. Houses with large wooden decks dotted one side of the fairway. On the other side, miles of shallow
Mother Jones13 min read
40 Acres And A Lie
POMPEY JACKSON was born in the heart of Georgia’s rice empire—the human property of one of the state’s wealthiest and most powerful families. He and his sisters were among hundreds enslaved on a sprawling marshland estate called Grove Hill, where lif
Mother Jones3 min read
The Gift of Time
WHAT DOES IT take to complete a major investigation? A lot of coffee, for one. But the key ingredient is probably the one that journalists have the least of these days: time. Time to run down leads that don’t pan out. Time to deeply understand an iss
Mother Jones6 min read
The Fast And The Spurious
THE 2015 Aston Martin Vulcan can go from zero to 60 in 2.9 seconds and maxes out at 208 mph. Only 24 of the two-door, two-seater carbon-fiber British speedsters were ever made, each with a $2.3 million price tag. They also aren’t street legal in the
Mother Jones1 min read
Contributions
For MoJo editor Mark Follman’s cover story on how the mother of mass shooter Elliot Rodger is working to prevent similar tragedies, we called on artist and designer MIKE MCQUADE, whose award-winning illustrations have graced the covers of countless b
Mother Jones4 min read
Chatbot Quacks
NOT LONG AGO, I noticed a new term trending in social media wellness circles: “certified hormone specialist.” I could have investigated it the old-fashioned way: googling, calling up an expert or two, digging into the scientific literature. I’m accus
Mother Jones3 min read
Abortionist
IN 2007, AFTER Paul Ross Evans pleaded guilty to leaving a bomb outside of a women’s health clinic in Austin, he assured the judge: He never meant for anyone to get hurt. “Except,” he clarified, “for the abortionists.” For almost two centuries, the m
Mother Jones12 min read
Fighting Chance
ON THE AFTERNOON of January 6, 2021, as election deniers armed with Tasers and tomahawks overran the US Capitol, Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) handed his colleague and close friend Eric Swalwell a pen. “Here,” he said to the California Democrat. “Stic
Mother Jones15 min read
Become Ungovernable
THE WAR FOR control of the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire began to escalate in the spring of 2021, when Jeremy Kauffman got the keys to the Twitter account. Kauffman, a tech entrepreneur, had arrived in the state a few years earlier as part of th
Mother Jones17 min read
The Democracy Bomb
A DAY AHEAD of the third anniversary of January 6, President Joe Biden traveled to Valley Forge, Pennsylvania—where George Washington encamped during the Revolutionary War—before delivering what he described as a “deadly serious” speech framing the s
Mother Jones3 min read
Crime Of The Crop
THE FEAR OF pernicious substances getting into children’s bodies and causing lasting harm is understandably a nail-biter for parents. Maybe that’s why the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) issued new guidelines in December to help d
Mother Jones1 min read
Contributions
Barcelona-based artist Guillem Casasús has illustrated some of our favorite issues, features, and packages—like this bubble-bursting cover for our dive into third parties. What’s getting you through the 2024 election cycle? To see our masthead, visit
Mother Jones6 min read
Party Crashers
EVEN BEFORE THE last shots of the Revolutionary War were fired, John Adams wrote a friend to warn, “There is nothing I dread so much as a division of the Republic into two great parties.” Alas, political scientists will tell you the winner-takes-all
Mother Jones9 min read
Well Played
THEY MIGHT NOT know his name, but millions of video gamers have encountered narrative designer Evan Narcisse’s handiwork in Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales, which showcases more Black and Brown characters in its first few minutes than most popular
Mother Jones6 min read
Thumbs-Down
VOTERS LOVE TO complain about the two-party system, which can leave us feeling stuck: Trump and Biden again? Yet most of our elections rely on a process that guarantees frustration. Plurality voting—pick one candidate and the top vote-getter wins—usu
Mother Jones10 min read
Spoiler Alert
IN THE SUMMER of 2000, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a scion of the Democratic Party dynasty, took time out of his schedule as an environmental attorney to write an op-ed for the New York Times. In the piece, Kennedy hailed consumer advocate Ralph Nader as
Mother Jones1 min read
Nader By The Numbers
…Or Discover Something New