Racist laws restrict over 4 million U.S. citizens from voting, by Denise Oliver Velez When income distorts equal justice under the law, by Susan Grigsby Military War Dog Care - “Republican objections” effectively neutered the bill, by Mark E Andersen GOP presidential candidates blow their 'Sister Souljah' moment to denounce right-wing extremism, by Ian Reifowitz Three fingers are pointing back at delusional conservatives, by Egberto Willies The absent black father myth—debunked by CDC, by Frank Vyan Walton Alberta's not Texas: Why you shouldn't overthink the progressive triumph in western Canada, by Steve Singiser Every last Republican primary candidate: Vote for me, because I hate the government, by Hunter
When income distorts equal justice under the law, by Susan Grigsby
Military War Dog Care - “Republican objections” effectively neutered the bill, by Mark E Andersen
GOP presidential candidates blow their 'Sister Souljah' moment to denounce right-wing extremism, by Ian Reifowitz
Three fingers are pointing back at delusional conservatives, by Egberto Willies
The absent black father myth—debunked by CDC, by Frank Vyan Walton
Alberta's not Texas: Why you shouldn't overthink the progressive triumph in western Canada, by Steve Singiser
Every last Republican primary candidate: Vote for me, because I hate the government, by Hunter
More than one-in-three American workers today are Millennials (adults ages 18 to 34 in 2015), and this year they surpassed Generation X to become the largest share of the American workforce, according to new Pew Research Center analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.
The interesting conclusion from the study from the scientists’ viewpoint (and Scripps’) was that a more sophisticated model of the Arctic found that contrary to previous models, the ice loss is not, technically, irreversible. If you could somehow reverse temperatures on the earth, the ice would come back. But in practice it is all but impossible to get temperatures back down again.
[Sanders] fielded questions from Face the Nation’s Bob Schieffer [video embedded below], stressing the importance of campaign finance reform and combating what he calls “the billionaire class in America”: There is, in my view, massive dissatisfaction with the corporate establishment and the greed of corporate America […] when you have 99% of new wealth going to the top 1%, when you have the top tenth of one percent owning almost as much as the bottom 90% [...] people don’t think that’s a good idea. As a result of this disastrous Citizens United Supreme court decision, clearly the billionaires—Koch brothers and others— are owning the political process. They will determine who the candidates are.
There is, in my view, massive dissatisfaction with the corporate establishment and the greed of corporate America […] when you have 99% of new wealth going to the top 1%, when you have the top tenth of one percent owning almost as much as the bottom 90% [...] people don’t think that’s a good idea. As a result of this disastrous Citizens United Supreme court decision, clearly the billionaires—Koch brothers and others— are owning the political process. They will determine who the candidates are.