Honestly, I haven't had this much fun watching a blogger trainwreck since Khamenei supposedly went toe-up. This episode has an extra layer of appeal, in that the usual wingnut blogs.
I'll have a longer piece about the general subject coming up next week, but in the meantime Brian Beutler notes an interesting proposal by California Dems. In response to the.
Saw Scott Miller and Commonwealth on Wednesday in Lexington, and Jason Isbell last night in Louisville. Thoughts:Miller opened with Highland County Boy, which awakened in me latent urges to find.
Dan Drezner (cursed be his name) aptly sums up my thinking on international law and Iraq. First, I think he's quite right to call out John Quiggin on the latter's.
Alabama journalist Gita Smith imagines the Supreme Court oral argument that will take place if the Court accepts a challenge to Alabama's law banning the sale of vibrating sex toys..
Peter Rodman:Military historians seem to be converging on a consensus that by the end of 1972, the balance of forces in Vietnam had improved considerably, increasing the prospects for South.
This is the last of a nine part series on the Patterson School Summer Reading List.1. China's Trapped Transition, Minxin Pei2. The End of Poverty, Jeffrey Sachs3. Illicit, Moises Naim4..
Brad Plumer has the details on mountaintop-removal mining and the Bush administration's inevitable but still-appalling attempts to ensure more of it with toothless legal restraints. Garance fills us in on.
- Toward a heremeneutics of breakfast
- Taking the Temperature of the Bluegrass
- This Day in Labor History: August 3, 1931
- This joke isn’t funny anymore
- Trump inflate prices
- Murder is the sport of the elected, and you don’t need to lift a finger of your hand
- Week 28
- Last Remnants of an Imperial Machine
- The customer is always wrong
- Erik Visits an Non-American Grave, Part 1,934