Obamacare 101, by DarkSyde Cultures don't have rights. People do, by Ian Reifowitz The Affordable Care Act: doing much good for little credit, by Dante Atkins The renewed war on the veteran teacher, by Steve Singiser America's Form Of Capitalism Kills Free Enterprise And Democracy, by Egberto Willies Challenging racial inequities, by Denise Oliver Velez Here's why if you don't like inequality, you should support unions, by Laura Clawson I have a dream that a clean and safe planet will be a civil right, by VL Baker
He knew how to make his guests “make news,” as the television industry saying goes, either through a sequence of incisive questions or carefully placed silences. He showcased both techniques during his penetrating series of interviews with President Nixon, broadcast in 1977, three years after Mr. Nixon was driven from office by the Watergate scandal, resigning in the face of certain impeachment. Mr. Frost not only persuaded Mr. Nixon to end a self-imposed silence, he also extracted an apology from the former president to the American people.
Mr. Frost not only persuaded Mr. Nixon to end a self-imposed silence, he also extracted an apology from the former president to the American people.
Just shut your fking piehole. Forever. You useless walking, bloodstained pile of casual death.
Looking dazed and sunburned, U.S. endurance swimmer Diana Nyad walked on to the Key West shore Monday, becoming the first person to swim from Cuba to Florida without the help of a shark cage. Nyad arrived at the beach just before 2 p.m. EDT, about 53 hours after she began her swim in Havana on Saturday.
Nyad arrived at the beach just before 2 p.m. EDT, about 53 hours after she began her swim in Havana on Saturday.