Author: Erik Loomis
That the police are nightmarish in this nation is a huge understatement. We hardly need to explain it at this point. Calls to defund or abolish the policy are morally.
I don't think this is the first time I've linked to an article about just how horribly Ken Burns' The Civil War has aged, since he chose to make good.
This is the grave of Carter Glass. Born in 1858 in Lynchburg, Virginia, Glass grew up in the Confederate world of loss and nostalgia. His father was a newspaper editor.
This 1928 travelogue by Isaac Upham doesn't feel like a journey into 92 years ago. It feels like 200 years ago. Obviously the 20th century has reached China--the European style.
Our society tortures people all the time. They are the millions thrown behind bars and forgotten about. As we know, prisons are hot beds of COVID. Prisoners in Richmond started.
It's not as if anyone listens to historians. But nonetheless, historians are very angry at Trump's neofascist history project presented last week, a direct attack against us teaching the complexities.
Pop Matters has an essay on Paul Reni's incredible 1928 film The Man Who Laughs, one of the creepiest movies ever made. That reminds me to make it a film.
New Mexico is a very special place, in part because of its ecological fragility as somewhere livable, with a long and rich history of human civilization, at the age of.