to convey in remarks, but no question about it, the president saying explicitly that president putin should no longer be in power, and this is new and very significant, jim. phil mattingly, the white house reporters are going to be peppering the press aides for more answers on this as i know you will be doing that as well. phil mattingly, thank you very much. joining me is retired brigadier general army attache to europe larry diamond, and also, the author of ill winds saving russia from rage and idea of am dission and complacency. so larry, thank you for being with us, and general, thank you for being with us, and larry, let me ask you about the president s speech a few moments ago and how significant that president biden said that vladimir putin could no longer
Appelbaum: Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism
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Democracy in Iceland | VOX, CEPR Policy Portal
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South Africa: When Strong Institutions and Massive Inequalities Collide
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A Childâs-Eye View, Both Haunted and Quotidian
From âThe Lost Soulâ
By Hillary Chute
THE LOST SOUL (Seven Stories, $22.95)
, an experimental fable illustrated by Joanna Concejo and translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones, resonates with our current moment. In its carefully executed pages, a man who âslept, ate, worked, drove a car and even played tennisâ wakes up in a hotel room forgetting his purpose, location and name. He guesses Andrew or Matthew before checking his passport: Itâs John. He consults âa wise old doctor,â who repeats a phrase that appears, unanchored, in the bookâs otherwise wordless prologue, next to a drawing of a postage stamp: âIf someone could look down on us from above, theyâd see that the world is full of people running about in a hurry, sweating and very tired, and their lost souls.â