Archive

Tilting at Turbines

Tilting at Turbines

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and several of John D. Rockefeller’s heirs have some investment advice for you. They want you, your college or alma mater, your local firefighters’ pension fund, and all other investors — big and...

read more
A Corporate Coup in College Football

A Corporate Coup in College Football

Growing up in Texas, I learned that God and guns were important, but football — well, football was the real religion. So I can understand the hyperbolic exuberance of a radio hypester in Montgomery, Alabama, who declared that the December 20 Camellia Bowl was “going...

read more
Get Wild without Abandoning Common Sense

Get Wild without Abandoning Common Sense

Minutes to midnight on New Year's Eve, I sat around a fire with friends, discussing plans for 2015. I told them mine: to hike over 200 miles on the John Muir Trail through the High Sierras, by myself. They told me that I’m nuts. “I might do it if I brought my gun,”...

read more
As 2015 Begins, Remember 2014’s Wins

As 2015 Begins, Remember 2014’s Wins

While last year's voters put a pack of reactionaries in charge of the new Congress, let's not forget that bigger majorities of the same electorate leapt at the chance to say “yes” to an array of unabashedly progressive ballot initiatives. For example, even though the...

read more
In OtherWords: Raising the Bar

In OtherWords: Raising the Bar

This holiday season marks my fifth anniversary at the helm of the OtherWords editorial service. I’m proud of how high you’ve helped us raise the editorial bar on our shoestring budget and excited to see more and more newspaper and online editors welcoming our bylines...

read more
In OtherWords: Raising the Bar

Torture Doesn’t Save Lives, It Costs Them

Thanks to the Senate’s report on CIA torture, Americans should now realize that there was nothing “enhanced” about the Bush administration's so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques." These tactics were more than just cruel and degrading — they were also harmful....

read more
Basketball’s One-and-Done Dilemma

Basketball’s One-and-Done Dilemma

It's been nine years since the last high schooler was selected in the NBA draft. That's because back in 2005, the NBA raised the minimum age for eligibility to 19. With this rule in place, the days of high school students going straight to the pros are over. For now....

read more
The Visa Curse

The Visa Curse

Many American women are still told they have to choose between love and career. But for many immigrants, that outdated dilemma is legally enforced. "I am here legally but I don’t have the right to work or even open an independent bank account," Rashi Bhatnagar, an...

read more