And the (True) One-Party State in America.
The post McCarthyism, Then and Now appeared first on scheerpost.com.
And the (True) One-Party State in America.
The post McCarthyism, Then and Now appeared first on scheerpost.com.
As you may have read in our previous blog post, the Drupal Association is pleased to be hosting Young African Leader Initiative (YALI) Fellow Denaya Dennis! The Mandela Washington Fellowship, YALI’s flagship program, empowers young African leaders. We invite you to get to know Denaya and learn more about his background!
At the same time these companies are acting like their hands are tied by supply disruptions, their profits have skyrocketed.
The post Distortion of Breakfast Price Hikes Leaves WSJ With Egg on Face appeared first on scheerpost.com.
In a recent interview with Lee Camp, well-known police reform author and coordinator of the Policing and Social Justice Project, Alex S. Vitale, sheds light on the recent murder of Tyree Nichols and America's ongoing fight for police reform.
The post Alex Vitale, Who Wrote the Book on Police Reform, Says Issue Is Politics, Not Training appeared first on MintPress News.
How the hell can we expect Americans to understand what the national debt means if the media doesn’t report it accurately?
The post More Drivel Over the National Debt! appeared first on scheerpost.com.
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Urgent, descriptive, plainspoken, hard-edged—a glasswork of facts—the poetry of John Freeman seems to come from a place of intense inner weather, and his latest book, Wind, Trees, is a gust from that interior world, which is a version of your world or mine. I mean to say his style is subtle, but sharp as corners. The poems have a tough quality, a perspective that seems watchful, but always from the edge of things, looking in. They are nervy and aware—Freeman has worked as an editor, books and magazines, and as an essayist, a critic—but the poems at times have the airy lightness of W. S. Merwin. Wind, Trees was written, initially, without any punctuation, as if Freeman were writing out of his own version of the moment when Merwin’s punctuation—after The Lice—dissolved away, but in this case Freeman has added some of it back in, locally, case by case, where he needs it to slow down or regulate what would otherwise turn too breathless for a book trying to catch its own soul, so to speak, trying to stay the confusion.
Ukraine must have ran out of munnie so now the Biden regime has to send some USDs so they can pay pensions and fund other initiatives… 😂
Biden on aid to Ukraine - "It's going to allow pensions and social support to be paid to the Ukrainian people so they have something in their pocket."
— MAZE (@mazemoore) February 17, 2023
Biden is guaranteeing pensions and welfare for Ukrainians but can't guarantee aid for Ohio.
America last. pic.twitter.com/2Qvdgt7Ce4
1. “Let me bring you some lunch!”
2. “Late-stage capitalism is really hard.”
3. “Let me help bandage them up (practical support).”
4. “Want to meet up at the park tomorrow?”
5. “Let’s join the campaign to shorten the work week while retaining a living wage.”
6. “They are really cute kids. Thanks for brightening my day by seeing them jump and be happy.”
7. “Here’s an ice pack so they can feel better (so many kids seem to be calmed by ice packs).”
8. “One time, I let my kid play on the iPad for four hours because I was just so tired.”
9. “I can see that you’re doing a good job, even though it doesn’t always feel like it.”
10. “I’d be happy to watch them for a while right now while you do errands, scroll on your phone, or whatever you need to do.”
In the face of the often stark increases in poverty seen in the rich world since the pandemic and the inflationary crisis that has followed, the debt crisis currently afflicting the poor world has failed to breach the public consciousness in the Global North. In fact, the Global South debt crisis has been rumbling away […]