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  • Clarity, Climate, and the Fort Hood Massacre

    Bill Bennett has a post up at National Review demanding that Major Nidal Malik Hasans murder of 13 people be deemed terrorism. Forty-nine percent of Americans apparently prefer the phrase killing spree. This, we are to understand, is the terminology of the morally unserious, the purveyors of psycho-babble, the politically ...
  • Would You Take a Pill That Prevents Cancer? Unlikely.

    Gina Kolata points out, once again, that diet and exercise have not been shown to affect breast cancer rates. Massive, well-run observational studies and randomized controlled trials turn up nothing. This finding appears to be unacceptable; popular culture rejects it utterly. Womens magazines continue to preach the holy gospel of five fruits ...
  • Is the Spanish Language Sexist?

    Nobody cops to political correctness anymore; policing language is what the other guy does. The rest of us are just, you know, telling it like it is. But playing PC-policeman officer is a relatively peaceful and noninvasive way to nudge the culture in a particular direction, a form of persuasion in a democracy built on consensus. And ...
  • The Cute-ocalypse is Coming

    Like Lauren, I enjoyed Jim Windolf's insightful attack on cute culture, but I find the otters-holding-hands/Iraq War connection to be a bit of a stretch. Windolf suggests that we're asking for forgiveness through penitential offerings of cuteness, but it's not my impression that most Americans think we need to be forgiven. Maybe popular cuteness ...
  • Pagans Were the Real Winners in Last Night's Election

    Dan Halloran is the next City Council Representative for New Yorks 19th district. He is a Republican. Also, he is the ''First Atheling,'' or prince, among members of a local pagan group that worships Norse gods. ''It is our hope,'' he explained on his now-missing website, ''to reconstruct the pre-Christian religion of the Germanic branch of ...
  • Vacation in Cuba and Fight Gerontocracy

    The ban on travel to Cuba was as pointless seven years ago as it is today, but somewhere in the interim, a significant number of Cuban-Americans turned against it. In a 2002 poll, 46 percent of Cuban-Americans said they wanted the restriction lifted. According to a September survey, 59 percent said the same. This is especially striking ...
  • The Terrifically Twisted World of "Twilight" Fanfiction

    Natasha Vargas-Cooper delves into the universe of Twlight fan-fiction, where Bella and Edward generally exchange more than longing looks. We get some heavy breathing and if not bodice-ripping, definitely thong-ripping ... (Read more in DoubleX.)
  • The Difficulties of Social Science

    Im glad you found some redeeming bits of wisdom in The Shriver Report, Amanda, because I find the whole thing cringe-inducing in a post-recovery-balloon-boy sort of way. Its not just that its some kind Maria Shriver vanity project masquerading as a progress report on less notable women. (Or maybe a progress report masquerading as ...
  • "Well, They Had To Give It to a Woman at Some Point"

    In the wake of Elinor Ostroms surprise Nobel win, unemployed economists are really turning on the charm. Check out the seething bitterness on this message board for job-seeking econ geeks. Ostrom isnt one of their studly quant jock heroes, so these boys have decided that shes just a P.C., feminist-friendly token of a pick. My favorite comment: ...
  • Skepticism About Female Sadness

    As every sentient being knows by now, a recent(ish) analysis by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers found that American women are increasingly bummed. Last week in a much-discussed article on DoubleX, Sharon Lerner blamed our mood on lack of paid maternity leave, childcare, flexible work options, and the like. Commenters seem inclined to ...
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