Through A Looking Glass, Darkly
Anyone who is concerned about conserving the environment which supports human beings is anti-human, while anyone who happily destroys it, for short-term profit, is pro-human.
Anyone who is concerned about conserving the environment which supports human beings is anti-human, while anyone who happily destroys it, for short-term profit, is pro-human.
Jerry Chautin | Posted 09.03.2009 | Business
Turbodog creates a pleasant stimulant-sensation at the back of my throat that metaphorically represents the stimulus needed by the small-business community.
Richard Valeriani | Posted 09.03.2009 | Politics
The beer bash culminated 10 days of non-stop media coverage. And Michael Jackson wasn't even involved.
Yvonne R. Davis | Posted 09.03.2009 | Politics
The problem with discussing "issues of race," is that it dummies down the issue of racism to an individual level, when the real problem is at the macro level.
The Daily Beast | Posted 08.30.2009 | Media
After all the hype for Thursday's White House Beer Summit the cheesy countdown clocks in the corner of the screen on CNN and MSNBC, the often silly pa...
Anna Deavere Smith | Posted 08.30.2009 | Politics
There are many practical ways that we can do race work, not just race talk in our daily lives. But should we go back to work the same way as before?
Vanity Fair | By Todd S. Purdum | Posted 08.30.2009 | Media
This strikes me as terrible idea, a sign of all that is wrong with America, and a metaphor for all the distance that still divides Harvard professors ...
Sunlight Foundation. | Sunlight Foundation | Posted 08.29.2009 | Home
Beer: it's not just for diffusing racial tensions. It's also for political fundraising. As are wine, bourbon, cocktails, margaritas, and mojitos -- al...
The Boston Globe | July 28, 2009 07:24 PM | Posted 08.29.2009 | Green
With two locals heading to the White House tomorrow for a couple of the most-talked-about beers ever, some area brewmasters say a Bay State beer shoul...
Harry Smith | Posted 08.28.2009 | Politics
As the big summit meeting at the White House draws closer, I'm wondering what we can learn from the beer preferences of Henry Louis Gates and James Crowley.
David Horton | Posted 09.04.2009 | Politics