The Future of America Hinges on Giving Teen Lingo Space
We’re in surreal times and should not allow the political fight of the moment to erode the gray areas that allow us to be human.
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We’re in surreal times and should not allow the political fight of the moment to erode the gray areas that allow us to be human.
If we’re really under threat of cataclysmic climate change, why do the activists have to go back so far for examples and use on-paper predictions to suggest acceleration?
Already ranking a dismal 45th on the overall Family Prosperity Index, Rhode Islanders will soon suffer from a 16-21% increase on their electricity bills, making matters even worse.
Cicilline and Whitehouse shouldn’t get away with banal statements of “shock” that a fellow traveler would resort to violence under the urgent mandate to stop politicians whom they have described in such demagogic terms.
Climate alarmism seems to raise more questions than it answers, and here’s one: If we should charge traditional energy companies for global harm, what other industries (e.g., Hollywood) do demonstrable harm and ought to be taxed accordingly?
Whose shame should be greater for tarring Republican U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (the President-elect’s choice for attorney general), Senator Whitehouse’s or Journalist Gregg’s?
Three Brown faculty members traffic in questionable statistics in an apparent push to end the deadly scourge of days that are “merely warm.”
When a U.S. Senator is treating political opponents as comparable to Scarface, it’s a safe bet that some special interest has something to gain.
Fear about increasingly frequent points of terrorism across the United States is made worse by the sense that people in power and in the news media will neither protect us from it nor allow us to protect ourselves.
Senator Whitehouse’s notion of expanding the application of RICO suits might point the weapon in the wrong direction.
Samuel Bell’s op-ed in today’s Providence Journal is hard to take seriously, but it must be taken seriously, because its like is doing terrible harm to the people of Rhode Island.
As progressives in the Democrat Party and the media vilify the Koch Brothers, it’s difficult not to question which side really corrupts the political system.
Brown Professor Ken Miller steps forward to instruct students about the importance of listening to opposing views (though his own past activism suggest the lesson has farther to go).
The journalists at PolitiFact RI appear to be okay with military presumptions against Americans provided it’s in opposition to the Tea Party.
Here’s a quick rundown of the numbers out from the latest Brown University Taubman Center poll of registered voters, conducted between Oct. 2–5, 2013.
1. In a 4-way gubernatorial preference poll, the results are:
Revelations about this deeply disturbing nastiness came fast and furious this week so it would have been easy to have missed some items.
Threats to the economy (cliffs and debts); RI lagging again (yawn); dependors and dependees; Social Security a problem; and a civil right to the war zone frat party.
Campaign finance serving incumbents; too common common political wisdom, locally; not hating the opposition; fearing the “common core.”
Justin writes live from Mitt Romney’s town hall in Warwick, Rhode Island.
Justin writes live and extemporaneously from the House Committee on Labor hearing concerning E-Verify.
Rhode Island’s top politicians seem more inclined to frighten and gin up Rhode Islanders than allow us to thrive of our own initiative.
So this week, we learn that America’s welfare cell phone program is so out of control that a United States senator received a solicitation offering her one.