AltWeeklies Wire

What We Don't Knownew

It's hard to tell just how pervasive the Bush administration's spying program is -- the documents, like so many others, are secret.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson, Steven T. Jones and G.W. Schulz  |  03-08-2006  |  Civil Liberties

More Than a Rap Sheetnew

In San Francisco, an ex-convict seeks redemption while an ex-activist seeks to rewrite the script for former felons.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  11-30-2005  |  Crime & Justice

Spying on the Governmentnew

A University of California, Berkeley, geographer maps the secret military bases of the American West -- where billions of dollars disappear into creepy clandestine projects.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  05-04-2005  |  War

The Snitchnew

A ruthless informant tells all about the underside of San Francisco's underworld.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  04-13-2005  |  Crime & Justice

Fight Nightnew

Deep in Oakland's postindustrial wasteland, writer A.C. Thompson takes you ring side to observe the spectacle of humans doing bad things to one another – for fun.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  02-23-2005  |  Sports

Doping Up the Rabblenew

With the use of less-lethal force on the rise and scary new weapons in the pipeline, such as high-voltage land mines, it's prime time to take a quick look at the gadgetry police departments are using to herd humans.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  10-20-2004  |  Civil Liberties

How Construction Giant Bechtel Manipulates the Pressnew

Bechtel, the company that's won lucrative contracts for reconstruction in Iraq, has a long list of P.R. disasters, like the Big Dig in Boston, that might have sunk another company. But a sophisticated press strategy keeps Bechtel out of trouble.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  08-07-2004  |  Business & Labor

Florida and Beyondnew

In the wake of the Florida debacle, Congress passed the Help America Vote Act, which provided $3.86 billion to replace ossified punch-card systems with silicon-based voting machines and improve voter education. Now gadflies and activists say the new machines, most notably touch-screen voting terminals, could prove as problematic as their analog predecessors.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  A. C. Thompson  |  08-05-2004  |  Politics

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