Knows too much, thinks even more. Has infinite space in her heart for tea and breakfast for dinner. Really from New York, so always ready to cut a bitch.
It’s impressive that President Biden has worked the economy up from bottom of where Trump left us. Now we need a leader who makes sure we can never fall that low again.
Measures and candidates protecting reproductive rights won big in Ohio and Virginia. Will Republicans finally take the hint, or bet their political future on collective amnesia?
Things are not good right now. They might not be for a long time. It’s tempting to block it out to protect ourselves, to make it easier to go on with our days, to disconnect from the very real horrors that this system is creating. But we can’t do that if we want it to get better. And we can’t make it better if we’re overwhelmed with how bad it’s gotten.
People are not their governments, and people are not their extremists. There is no way to earn the violence happening in Israel and Gaza, no sin that could excuse the suffering that everyone is now enduring.
Kamala Harris — who is neither white, nor a man, nor old — is making the entire establishment nervous that maybe we will have to let someone other than old white men run things — again.
We had to stay up a little late to let the grand jury work its magic, but we finally got it: the 41 count indictment including a RICO charge for an alleged (witnessed) conspiracy to interfere in Georgia’s elections by 19 people—one of whom is the former president of the United States.
This summer of solidarity isn’t just about actors and writers, “unskilled” labor or the convenience of ChatGPT. It’s about whether our work will be valued as the product of human endeavor.
Running around talking about parallels between the present day and the deadliest conflict in U.S. history doesn't win you a lot of fans. So how do you avert a calamity that no one wants to acknowledge is even possible?
Since ProPublica published an article about the "friendship" between a sitting Supreme Court Justice and a real estate billionaire, most of the attention has been focused on Harlan Crow, the Nazi-memorabilia collecting nepo baby who loves lavishing exorbitant gifts on government officials. While there's certainly nothing wrong with looking deeper at the oligarch buying influence in our government, let's not get distracted from the bigger theat: what Clarence Thomas is selling.
As of this past weekend, it has been 112 years since a mixture of capitalist exploitation, malignant neglect, disregard for vulnerable members of society, and unfortunate chance led to one of the most terrible industrial accidents in U.S.
It was a truly relaxing long weekend with a hard-to-commercialize holiday until the nuttiest peanut in the GOP candy bar got on Twitter to call for a "national divorce.'' Them’s the wingnut words for secession.
We are halfway through Black History Month (BHM), and I feel like asking my white friends to lend me their Karen energy because I’d like to speak to the manager about a return.
In the ongoing hellscape known as reality, it was somehow a perfect encapsulation of 2020 to watch a random entitled white woman upgrade to her Ultimate Karen form by confronting, then attacking a Black man’s polite request with the promise of state-enforced violence.