Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Oscar is a mama’s boy. Here’s a picture Dr A took of him where he always wants to be, on her lap: Continue reading Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Oscar is a mama’s boy. Here’s a picture Dr A took of him where he always wants to be, on her lap: Continue reading Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Oscar is a mama’s boy. Here’s a picture Dr A took of him where he always wants to be, on her lap: Continue reading Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Oscar is a mama’s boy. Here’s a picture Dr A took of him where he always wants to be, on her lap: Continue reading Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Oscar is a mama’s boy. Here’s a picture Dr A took of him where he always wants to be, on her lap: Continue reading Friday Catblogging: Lap Cat
Legendarily dickish former spook MIchael Hayden is back in the news. He’s been known to insult people and he’s at it again: Who gets “emotional” about torture—or, rather, what is the proper emotional response to a history of torture and lies? On Fox News, on Sunday morning, Chris Wallace asked Michael Hayden, the former director of the C.I.A., about a report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, sixty-three hundred pages long, that “says the C.I.A. misled the public about the severity and the success of the enhanced interrogation program.” Hayden’s first response was to talk about the feelings of … Continue reading At least he didn’t call her hysterical
Legendarily dickish former spook MIchael Hayden is back in the news. He’s been known to insult people and he’s at it again: Who gets “emotional” about torture—or, rather, what is the proper emotional response to a history of torture and lies? On Fox News, on Sunday morning, Chris Wallace asked Michael Hayden, the former director of the C.I.A., about a report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, sixty-three hundred pages long, that “says the C.I.A. misled the public about the severity and the success of the enhanced interrogation program.” Hayden’s first response was to talk about the feelings of … Continue reading At least he didn’t call her hysterical
Legendarily dickish former spook MIchael Hayden is back in the news. He’s been known to insult people and he’s at it again: Who gets “emotional” about torture—or, rather, what is the proper emotional response to a history of torture and lies? On Fox News, on Sunday morning, Chris Wallace asked Michael Hayden, the former director of the C.I.A., about a report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, sixty-three hundred pages long, that “says the C.I.A. misled the public about the severity and the success of the enhanced interrogation program.” Hayden’s first response was to talk about the feelings of … Continue reading At least he didn’t call her hysterical
Legendarily dickish former spook MIchael Hayden is back in the news. He’s been known to insult people and he’s at it again: Who gets “emotional” about torture—or, rather, what is the proper emotional response to a history of torture and lies? On Fox News, on Sunday morning, Chris Wallace asked Michael Hayden, the former director of the C.I.A., about a report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, sixty-three hundred pages long, that “says the C.I.A. misled the public about the severity and the success of the enhanced interrogation program.” Hayden’s first response was to talk about the feelings of … Continue reading At least he didn’t call her hysterical
Legendarily dickish former spook MIchael Hayden is back in the news.He’s been known to insult people and he’s at it again: Who gets “emotional” about torture—or, rather, what is the proper emotional response to a history of torture and lies? On Fox News, on Sunday morning, Chris Wallace asked Michael Hayden, the former director of the C.I.A., about a report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, sixty-three hundred pages long, that “says the C.I.A. misled the public about the severity and the success of the enhanced interrogation program.” Hayden’s first response was to talk about the feelings of Dianne … Continue reading At least he didn’t call her hysterical
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Obamacare failed because MSNBC didn’t “push back hard enough” against Fox: Stelter featured two partisan commentators, Marc Lamont Hill and Ben Ferguson, to debate the divisiveness of the issue not as pundits but as “regular people” confronting the barrage of coverage. The crux of the disagreement came over why the right had been so successful at getting the anti-Obamacare narrative to stick. Hill argued that it was because the so-called liberal media (of which MSNBC is a metonym) had been unsuccessful in forcefully countering Fox News’ drumbeat of criticism, while Ferguson said the narrative was a representation of a reality … Continue reading ‘Partisan Media’ Destroys All Things Equally
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
Ugh: With more people attending colleges charging ever-higher tuition, the number of borrowers has increased 70 percent in 10 years. So has the amount that the average student borrows. In 2004, 23 million people had student loans, and the average balance was $15,651. By 2013, 39 million people had student loans, and the average balance was nearly $25,000. Tuition at even a state school is now so expensive that even if I’d be able to get into Madison these days (my GPA was decent but not outstanding and I sucked at standardized tests) I wouldn’t have been able to afford … Continue reading Work Your Way Through College, Kids!
It’s been 40 years since Hammerin’ Hank Aaron hit career home run 715 off of Al Downing of the Dodgers but he’s still a slugger: “We can talk about baseball. Talk about politics. Sure, this country has a black president, but when you look at a black president, President Obama is left with his foot stuck in the mud from all of the Republicans with the way he’s treated. We have moved in the right direction, and there have been improvements, but we still have a long ways to go in the country. The bigger difference is that back then … Continue reading Quote Of The Day: Henry Aaron Edition
It’s been 40 years since Hammerin’ Hank Aaron hit career home run 715 off of Al Downing of the Dodgers but he’s still a slugger: “We can talk about baseball. Talk about politics. Sure, this country has a black president, but when you look at a black president, President Obama is left with his foot stuck in the mud from all of the Republicans with the way he’s treated. We have moved in the right direction, and there have been improvements, but we still have a long ways to go in the country. The bigger difference is that back then … Continue reading Quote Of The Day: Henry Aaron Edition
It’s been 40 years since Hammerin’ Hank Aaron hit career home run 715 off of Al Downing of the Dodgers but he’s still a slugger: “We can talk about baseball. Talk about politics. Sure, this country has a black president, but when you look at a black president, President Obama is left with his foot stuck in the mud from all of the Republicans with the way he’s treated. We have moved in the right direction, and there have been improvements, but we still have a long ways to go in the country. The bigger difference is that back then … Continue reading Quote Of The Day: Henry Aaron Edition