Opinion In today’s dark political times, remember the hope of 1968 America has been broken before, but dynamic Americans offered hope to counter the dark patterns of the past. by Knute Berger / May 9, 2018
Equity The chilling threads of our racist past A trip from Washington to Oregon — both hotbeds of racism — to understand their ugly histories. by Knute Berger Crosscut's staff columnist / April 23, 2018
Opinion Get ready for Cascadiatopolis How rural Vashon Island is being impacted by the tectonic forces of regional growth. by Knute Berger / March 5, 2018
Equity What Jenny Durkan and Bertha Knight Landes have in common Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan at her primary election night party. by Knute Berger / November 14, 2017
Equity Mossback in the Wild West: celluloid and a concentration camp Image of re-created Manzanar buildings and barracks. by Knute Berger / May 15, 2017
Equity George Washington owned slaves. Should we rename the state? George Washington, the former president and slaveowner for whom the state is named. by Knute Berger / September 22, 2016
Equity The fatal Ride the Ducks crash and a law's anti-immigrant past by Knute Berger / August 22, 2016
Equity Best of 2015: The untold story of Seattle's racist mayor Portrait of frontier journalist and Seattle mayor Beriah Brown and his wife Jeanie taken at E. F. Dollarhide’s Seattle studio in the 1870s. by Knute Berger / December 25, 2015
Opinion The Northwest's uneasy relationship with fascism There was a time when many people in Seattle and Washington state embraced fascism. by Knute Berger / December 10, 2015