Separate Inequality. Homer Plessy and discrimination by law, by Denise Oliver Velez Rick Santorum's single-payer birth control, by Dante Atkins How Karl Rove, Rich Lowry and Politico are damaging America, by Hunter Book review: Elizabeth Warren's 'A Fighting Chance', by Susan Gardner How to pick your opponent: A guide to gaming Republican primaries, by Darth Jeff Why Georgia Democrats want to avoid post-November runoffs, and what they'll need in order to do so, by Taniel Glenn Greenwald's blind spot on racism and sexism, by Armando Women are morons. That's what they think, by Ian Reifowitz
Rick Santorum's single-payer birth control, by Dante Atkins
How Karl Rove, Rich Lowry and Politico are damaging America, by Hunter
Book review: Elizabeth Warren's 'A Fighting Chance', by Susan Gardner
How to pick your opponent: A guide to gaming Republican primaries, by Darth Jeff
Why Georgia Democrats want to avoid post-November runoffs, and what they'll need in order to do so, by Taniel
Glenn Greenwald's blind spot on racism and sexism, by Armando
Women are morons. That's what they think, by Ian Reifowitz
The Wolfeboro, N.H., police commissioner who has stood by his comment calling President Obama a [n-----] is facing a growing cascade of calls to step down, including from the tiny lakeside town’s most famous summer resident—one-time Obama opponent Mitt Romney. “The vile epithet used and confirmed by the commissioner has no place in our community,” the former Bay State governor, who owns a home in the popular Granite State vacation spot, said in a statement to the Herald. “He should apologize and resign.”
“The vile epithet used and confirmed by the commissioner has no place in our community,” the former Bay State governor, who owns a home in the popular Granite State vacation spot, said in a statement to the Herald. “He should apologize and resign.”
Archaeologists have discovered the skeleton of a massive dog that would have stood 7 feet tall on its hind legs, in the ruins of Leiston Abbey in Suffolk, England, according to a news report in The Express. The remains are near where an ancient legend spoke of a hellhound called Black Shuck, said to have flaming red eyes and a rugged black coat, who terrorized villagers. The name Shuck derives from the Old English word scucca meaning ‘demon’. [...] The remains of the massive dog, which is estimated to have weighed 200 pounds, were found just a few miles from the two churches where Black Shuck killed the worshippers. It appears to have been buried in a shallow grave at precisely the same time as Shuck is said to have been on the loose, primarily around Suffolk and the East Anglia region.
The remains of the massive dog, which is estimated to have weighed 200 pounds, were found just a few miles from the two churches where Black Shuck killed the worshippers. It appears to have been buried in a shallow grave at precisely the same time as Shuck is said to have been on the loose, primarily around Suffolk and the East Anglia region.