US

  • The dying demographic of right-wing talk radio

    Ninety-eight major advertisers—including Ford and Geico—will no longer air spots on Premiere Networks’ offensive’ programs. Insiders say the loss will rock right-wing talk radio. (…) But this latest controversy comes at a particularly difficult time for right-wing talk radio. They are playing to a (sometimes literally) dying demographic. Rush & Co. rate best among old,

    lire la suite

  • La guerre à la drogue comme politique raciste

    The book marshals pages of statistics and legal citations to argue that the get-tough approach to crime that began in the Nixon administration and intensified with Ronald Reagan’s declaration of the war on drugs has devastated black America. Today, Professor Alexander writes, nearly one-third of black men are likely to spend time in prison at

    lire la suite

  • Pinkwashing

    But Saturday’s protesters felt differently. Palestinian queers have reached out to us, said Emmaia Gelman of Queers Against Israeli Apartheid, and you can’t fight for queer rights in a state with no civil society. Several protesters, many of whom said they were Jewish, invoked what they called pinkwashing, Israel’s alleged touting of its progressive stance on

    lire la suite

  • La facilité de vieillir

    J’ai peur de la vieillesse. Oui, franchement, j’ai peur. Et j’ai peur surtout de la lente mais inévitable dégringolade vers l’incapacité physique et, finalement, la mort. Je ne crains aucunement la mort, mais je ne peux pas m’empêcher de me souvenir des paroles pensives de ma mère et de l’amie écrivain, qui m’ont répété maintes

    lire la suite

  • Les nouveaux standards journalistiques de NPR

    It now commits itself to avoiding the worst excesses of he said, she said journalism. It says to itself that a report characterized by false balance is a false report. It introduces a new and potentially powerful concept of fairness: being fair to the truth. My verdict: Bravo, NPR. Within the world of pressthink there

    lire la suite

  • La loi Moustache

    On President’s Day 2012, The American Mustache Institute introduced the Million Mustache March in support of the Stimulus To Allow Critical Hair Expenses, or the STACHE Act. If adopted by Congress, the STACHE Act would provide up to a $250.00 annual tax refund for Mustached Americans. (…) For every Million Mustache March participant, America’s leading

    lire la suite

  • La dernière chance des Républicains

    On the other hand, if they lose their bid to unseat Obama, they will have mortgaged their future for nothing at all. And over the last several months, it has appeared increasingly likely that the party’s great all-or-nothing bet may land, ultimately, on nothing. In which case, the Republicans will have turned an unfavorable outlook

    lire la suite

  • Bossypants en 8 citations

    Gay people don’t actually try to convert people. That’s Jehovah’s Witnesses you’re thinking of. I had grown up as the whitest girl in a very Greek neighborhood, but in the eyes of my new classmates, I was Frida Kahlo in leggings. I think God designed our mouths to die first to help us slowly transition

    lire la suite

  • Enfant du millénaire

    Heather McGhee est à la tête d’un think tank américain progressiste et parle brillamment de l’anxiété aux États-Unis autour de la notion de service public et de communauté. Elle explique que les Américains en sont venus à ne même plus imaginer que les services publics pouvaient être une solution à leurs problèmes, suite à la

    lire la suite

  • Gay revolution in the workplace

    Companies are competing with each other to produce the most imaginative gay-friendly policies. American Express has an internal pride network with more than 1,000 members. Cisco gives gay workers a bonus to make up for an anomaly in the American tax code. (If you are married, the cost of various insurance premiums is deducted from

    lire la suite