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     "‘I think they're collecting information about us. Companies do that sort of thing. You should see the data my brother has about visitors to his website.’"

    “A handbook for activists on the front lines as well as a reference for academics and journalists, Kimball’s book shows how new words and meanings invited “everyday people” into the policy-

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    “We are living in the Golden Age for Surveillance.”
    —Jennifer Stisa Granick

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    It is late at night on June 4, 2018, and under cover of darkness a father and son, carrying nothing but a backpack, approach “a short wall painted dark” that demarcates the international border bet

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     Richard Clarke served in the White House for four presidents and was appointed National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counterterrorism under Bill Clinton, and the first

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    “Robin Marty and Jessica Mason Pieklo make clear that the likely end of Roe v Wade is at hand and involved more than the end of Roe.” 

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    “this book provides critical, factual information to families who feel alone and under-resourced, facing an impossible situation.”

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    The Burglary shows how a small group of committed individuals performed the bravest act of all, exposing Hoover . . .”

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    Mr. Gutmann’s chosen stance is as reporter, not participant.

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    As a somewhat jaded and world-weary incarcerated writer, rarely do I read something that makes me really mad.

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    The social and political implications of the digital economy are the source of increasing attention. The latest entry comes from Congressman Ro Khanna, a Democrat representing Silicon Valley.

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    Addressing the role of urban placemaking in the context of the challenges of contemporary society, authors Robert Steuteville and Philip Langdon observe, “While the world has big issues, we should

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    Something is not right in Tel Ilan, the fictional Israeli village set in the Manasseh Hills (probably in the general vicinity of Rishon L’Tzion) in which the first seven of the eight stories in

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    “not a book for the faint-hearted but demands to be read by both ‘westerners’ and Muslims alike.”