I live in Dayton, Ohio. Dayton was a bright spot of industrial America, a sort of early twentieth century Silicon Valley. There are not many jobs here now.
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My City Was Gone: A Tour of Dayton, OhioI live in Dayton, Ohio. Dayton was a bright spot of industrial America, a sort of early twentieth century Silicon Valley. There are not many jobs here now. Ending the Abortion War: Winning Hearts and MindsI want to tell my story of conversion from anti-abortion/pro-life to pro-life/pro-choice, in the hope that it will help bring people on both sides together in a way that defeats the old frame and instead gives us a mutual agreement that can be considered Pro-Woman and Pro-Child. Obama's Katrina Moment: Is It Here This Soon?Got to hand it to Frank Rich at the New York Times for this little and yes, acidic piece. It's an eye-opener to truth, justice and the American way.
A Consumer Loan Bad News Two-FerYesterday's news offered a two-fer on the "when's the recession/depression going to end" front: both major forms of consumer debt on personalty are still showing increasing rates of delinquency and default. So if you're a credit card company or an auto loan financer, don't look for the nightmare to end any time soon. The Gospel According To Mark SanfordOr if one prefers, chapter whatever of The Village Idiot Strikes Again.
Socialism Rampant!....The Great Lie ContinuesA major plank in the Republicans' organized resistance to common sense solutions to the current economic disaster is the claim that raising income taxes on the richest Americans in order to support programs to improve the lot of poorer Americans is such a "redistribution of wealth" that it is Socialism. Or Communism! Or both. And Fascism, to boot! The Burdens of Being Wall Street: Let the Dog and Pony Show BeginNothing gets a concerted anti-regulation propaganda effort going as quickly and widely as the hint of a possibility of a chance that the public is thinking of reining in the rich and the powerful. And so, as the media trumpet new "restrictions" on CEO compensation in one version of the stimulus bill, and the public mood toward financial industry executives and charlatans turns surly, we get: (a) odes to the beauty of greed, (b) whimpers about the lack of compassion for how expensive it can be to "live up to your station," and (b) an orchestrated dog and pony show on how onerous the new "restrictions" are. Mmm, guess I'm a Socialist!Chutzpah. Yiddish word, loosely? Big, brass balls. Insolence, audacity, impertinence. Doing or saying something that makes others stand back and gasp at how we just cannot believe anyone can do or say something of that calibre.
The State of Television News: This Is ‘Choice?’Thank God for the electronic revolution, cable and satellite tv, and all the other modern inventions that have given the public such an incredible range of choices. Right? 1982 Was Worse? Really? Let's ReviewDavid Leonhardt's column in Tuesday's NY Times posits that the economy stinks right now, but not as bad as it stunk in 1982. To be fair to Leonhardt, the column as a whole is more nuanced than the title, "The Economy Is Bad, but 1982 Was Worse," would have you believe. But Leonhardt still does conclude that "the economy is not yet as bad as it was in the early 1980s" (though he finds it "likely" that we'll reach that low point by the end of 2009, even if the stimulus bill passes). |
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