Thanks a lot Scott. I have a piece in Salon about the affluenza defense, class stratification, and unequal justice under the law.
A very important point: A few minutes after he signed the Civil Rights Acton July 2, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented Hubert Humphrey, who had led the fight for.
I'm so old I remember I remember when Christopher Caldwell was supposed to be a reasonable, moderate, thinking person's reactionary. At least the last of those still applies: Western critics.
As part of some homework so I could write about Philip Seymour Hoffman when I'm ready, I tweeted today that the Alfred Molina drug deal sequence in Boogie Nights was.
Something we discussed in comments this weekend came up in the last Jambaroo of the year. Magary made the point more directly a couple weeks ago: Anytime a team like.
Richard Overy's The Bombing War: Europe 1939-1945 catalogs the strategic bombing campaigns of the European theater of World War II. Overy covers the two best-known campaigns-- the Blitz and the Combined.
Shorter Jonah Goldberg: "This new Democratic argument about how it's good that people will no longer be dependent on their current employer for insurance is, apart from the fact that.
The more parents who opt out of making their children go through the pointless and educationally destructive Common Core standardized testing that is the fad of Rheeist politicians of both.
- Money never sleeps, but sometimes it needs a nap
- Biden and the ICC
- Erik Visits an American Grave, Part 1,633
- Another check-in with the information security candidate
- Trump trial ends
- Dick Durbin and the Ballad of the Blue Slip
- Judging without law: the ballad of Sam Alito
- Fantasy Deportation Games
- Labor Victories in the South
- This is America