. . . .
The Humanist Online A Magazine of Critical Inquiry and Social Concern .
Subscribe  |  Archive  |  Advertise  |  Write for Us  |  About Us
. .
.
.
Essay Contest
Our annual contest is open to those ages 13 to 25. Enter your essay and win cash prizes!
Published by the:
American Humanist Association

The Humanist

May/June 1999

Volume 59, Number 3


Cover Story:

New Bedlam: Jails—Not Psychiatric Hospitals—
Now Care for the Indigent Mentally Ill

by Spencer P. M. Harrington

In 200 years we haven't advanced far from Bedlam, the infamous London hospital for the mentally ill. We still take those who need treatment and lock them up—all too often in our jails. And when we do release them, we fail to make adequate arrangement for their care on the outside, resulting in further crime and punishment.

North Korea: The Land Americans Aren't Permitted to Know

by John M. Swomley

U.S. forces have guarded the Demilitarized Zone between South and North Korea since 1953 in violation of the armistice signed at the end of the Korean War. After nearly a half century of peace on the peninsula, why are they still there? Could it be because the Pentagon is manipulating the situation for its own benefit?

Abraham, Isaac, and Some Hidden Assumptions of Our Culture

by Carol Delaney

The test of Abraham's faith was his willingness to kill his son at God's command. Is such faith a virtue? Why didn't God instead test Abraham's willingness to protect his son? And how come nobody asked Sarah's opinion in the matter? (Read Article)

Missing the Forest for the Trees

by Mark P. Gibney

In the United States, ethics are debated endlessly without ever tackling the central ethical issues of our time. By focusing narrowly on such micro issues as individual conduct in given situations—and not on the larger questions of the justice of our social system or the way the world works—we conveniently ignore how the social and the global affect the personal, and vice versa, imagining ourselves "good" simply because we are decent.

A New Economy for a New Century

by Lester R. Brown and Christopher Flavin

Waste Not, Want Not

by Gary Gardner and Payal Sampat

Our planet's environment simply cannot tolerate the globalization of the West's fossil-fuel-based, automobile-centered, throw-away economy. Nor can the West continue to enjoy this economy at the expense of the rest of the world. As these two articles explain, a new ethic is needed for the twenty-first century, along with a new concept of progress, to make modern civilization sustainable.

The Humanist Interview:
Sitting on the Windpipe of the First Amendment

by Greg Bates

Is the Information Age expanding our knowledge and our options or shrinking them? Media analyst Norman Solomon offers a sobering view of how the information industry has been consolidated and left in only a few hands.


Civil Liberties Watch:
Artistic Repression in America

by Barbara Dority

Human Rights Watch:
Guatemala: Clinton's Latest Damn-Near Apology

by Bob Harris

.