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Bill Bennett has a post up at National Review demanding that Major Nidal Malik Hasan’s 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 ...
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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. Women’s magazines
continue to preach the holy gospel of five fruits ...
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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 ...
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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 ...
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Dan Halloran is the next City Council Representative for New York’s
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 ...
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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 ...
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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.)
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I’m 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. It’s not just that it’s some
kind Maria Shriver vanity project masquerading as a progress report on
less notable women. (Or maybe a progress report masquerading as ...
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In the wake of Elinor Ostrom’s 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 isn’t one of their studly quant jock heroes, so these boys have decided that she’s just a P.C., feminist-friendly token of a pick. My favorite comment: ...
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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 ...