Archive
The Lineup: Week of December 6-13, 2010
In this week’s OtherWords editorial package, Marc Morial addresses school funding inequality and Chuck Collins looks at how Congress might spend the $700 billion in potential revenue from letting Bush’s tax cuts for the richest Americans expire. Get all this and more in your inbox by subscribing to our weekly newsletter. If you haven’t signed up yet, please do.
A $700 Billion Dilemma
How would you spend $700 billion? Congress has to decide this month.
Public School Funding: Separate and Skewed
With all the talk about firing “underperforming” teachers, closing the achievement gap, and adopting “common core standards” for students, too many experts are missing a basic source of America’s education woes: the inherently unequal and unfair system for funding public schools within each of the 50 states.
This isn’t Sarah Palin’s Alaska
With the holidays upon us again, I think back with both pleasure and distress to the feast I was welcomed to a few seasons ago at the top of Alaska.
New Hope to Stop Violence against Women
The United States has made great strides to change the sickening attitudes and legal obstacles that for decades held women in the grip of physical and sexual violence, far too often with little recourse, while their abusers went unpunished.
End the Pot Prohibition
I have never smoked marijuana, not even a puff. Not ever.
Meet Your New Neighborhood Food Market
Yes, the $400-billion-a-year retail behemoth, with two million employees laboring in 8,500 stores spread around the globe, now is putting on a “local” mask.
Crocodile Tears
Gambling: Upbeat, but Slipping
Casino developers have to plunk down a lot of their own chips these days. Few researchers doubt that risk-taking is hard-wired into a slew of human brains, but at what point does over saturation cause the developer to lose his shirt?
The Lineup: Week of November 29-December 5, 2010
As global climate talks get underway in Cancun, Miriam Pemberton calls for more parity in spending on climate and military security and Diana Bronson warns that “geoengineering” fixes for the world’s climate problems could do far more harm than good.