Outing the Ringers
From Jay Smooth’s Ill Doctrine, a hip hop video blog:
Continue reading →From Jay Smooth’s Ill Doctrine, a hip hop video blog:
Continue reading →As I read more about the Occupy Wall Street movement, I am asking myself questions about the Masters of the Universe that they are protesting against. How did these people/organizations come to be? That, of course, is an enormously complex … Continue reading →
I don’t belong to Facebook, but I saw this posted on a forum where I hang out and thought it worth promoting. It is on Facebook and the author says, “feel free to share…” “Dear Wall Street: Wondering what all … Continue reading →
Finally.
Continue reading →Several months ago, I replied to a comment on a blog that I used to frequent, but no longer do because reading that blog raises my blood pressure dangerously high. The comment was in reaction to a local zoning ordinance … Continue reading →
I watched this video, found it amusingly done, and wanted to contribute to it “going viral”. It has been watched by over 458,000 people, so far. It was uploaded by The Corbett Report. If you would like to read the … Continue reading →
Two years ago, I posted a piece on Labor Day. The name of this blog is Turning Points and it is indeed a record of my ongoing journey from innocence to informed opposition. As this country increasingly lurches to the … Continue reading →
On Thursday night, Obama could have called for a transformation of our economy from financialization to a real economy. But he didn’t. He could have called for taking the money we spend on our pointless wars and using it to … Continue reading →
Tomorrow is the tenth anniversary of 9/11. I’m so looking forward to all of the chest-thumping and cheers of patriotic fervor. Not. For those few out there who refuse to participate in the enabling of the political class in this … Continue reading →
I’ve altered the title of the article that I’m linking to, because I think those who support the strikers at Verizon (I do!) should know about these facts and study them. One of them is this: in 1937, when the … Continue reading →