Interactive Map

Featured Posts

Recent Snide Remarks

Who the Heck Are We?

Educational Resources

All Categories

Stay Connected!


Twitter

RSS

Facebook
 
Get daily updates in your inbox!

Delivered by FeedBurner

What's Our Motley Crew Reading?

Popular Topix

 

Posts Tagged ‘new york times’

Thanks, Wikicommons

Thanks, Wikicommons

We here at USDemocrazy are taking time to reflect. We would much rather do that then listen to our editors!

This week features a look back at 2009, and today reflection will be political in nature.

Seeing that we are in the season of giving, how about the ten perfect gifts for the politicians in your life? …read more.

Share |
 
October
23

USDemocrazy reading suggestion

by ChickPea News

We at USDemocrazy spend so much of our time foraging through the news… its hard not to go kooky.

Though most of us are kooky to begin with, we find humor helps us ward off the effects of over-infomania.

We also find a good story can alleviate the pain as well.

Case in point: David Rohde, a reporter for the New York Times, has published a five part article detailing his recent experience of being a prisoner of the notorious Taliban.

The series is titled “Held by The Taliban.” Mr. Rohde presents an inside look at the workings of Taliban militants. It is as powerful as it is riveting, reading more like a novel than an article.

It is a story worth a read.

Share |
 

The American Bar Association (ABA, not to be confused with ABBA) is back! BACK! BACK!!!

Where did they go? you may ask. What did they do? Why should I care? Well let us here at USDemocrazy point you in the right direction.

ABA is back in the business of nominating judges!

What in the world do a bunch of lawyers have to do with nominating judges? That’s the government’s gig right? Well yes, it is the government’s gig. Before you can be a federal judge you have to be nominated by the President and given the OK by the Senate.

But in the past the ABA has been in the rather powerful position of rating prospective judicial candidates. Kind of like ratemyprofessors.com but really official and really important… a practice that has been going on since Eisenhower (i.e. since the last century).

The ABA were sent away for a little while however, as this BLT article talks about. The ABA was kind of given the boot eight years ago, when the Bush administration came to Washington. The Bush people cited this study, saying that the ABA was a little too cozy with liberal candidates.

In response, there is this study (we are giving you a lot of studies to study) which essentially uses a lot of data to say “nuh-uh, do not.” We here at USDemocrazy have no opinion on the subject, we’re just letting you know what went down.

Either way, the Obama administration has brought the ABA back. The NYT’s Adam Liptak writes about the subject here. Conservatives are none too pleased about it, as the ConservativeOutpost clearly demonstrates. But then again, we never really hear about conservatives or liberals jumping for joy at the decisions of their counterparts. Except maybe when listening to ABBA… After all, who doesn’t love “Mamma Mia!”? Don’t answer that.

We here at USDemocrazy want to know what you think! Yeah, there’s politics as usual going on, but whaddya think about any kind of outside organization having such a formal role in a “government” process?

Adam Liptak’s article above also talks about this guy. This is Robert Bork. Besides looking a little scary, he has a lot to say about the subject. He got “Borked” by the ABA.

Share |
 

… but we at USDemocrazy are fairly certain the that does not apply to our US economy. 

A few weeks ago, we posted a blog that basically said: if you talk about too much about recession, you could end up with a depression . Well, apparently no one has learned their lesson! 

This article in the New York Times tells us how upset we should be about the loss of our jobs. And this article from the Wall Street Journal is especially nice and perky. It gives us the odds of the United States stumbling into a deep dark depression! 

We at USDemocrazy kinda prefer stories like NPR’s story on “Laid Off Camp”.  This is about unemployed or furloughed people who seek out others in the same bind. One guy said he just wants to meet someone who can go to museums in the middle of the day with him. The Laid Off Camp counselors say that you should embrace unemployment, not stress about it! If you’re going to be out of work… be happy out of work.

In these tough times stories of optimism are great (and hard) to find.  As all of us who have been jobless know… being happy and unemployed is easier said than done!

Share |
 


Most likely, you’ve heard about Twitter, but if you’re anything like us at USDemocrazy circa two weeks ago, you probably still have no idea how it works.

Or maybe you’re one of those annoyingly savvy people who is just lightyears ahead of us mere mortals and can thus pontificate on the greatness of Twitter for hours. (Yawn!)

Either way, you’re likely to find this piece from NPR’s Weekend Edition pretty entertaining.  It features Andy Carvin and Scott Simon trying to explain to 80+  year old colleague Dan Schorr the glories of Twitter.  They are aided in this challenge by Dwight from “The Office,” also known as actor Rainn Wilson

Anyone who is anyone is Tweeting these days.

If you aren’t Tweeting, don’t worry — these “Tweets” aren’t what you think. They are just a nickname for your personal mini status updates.  These updates are put up on the Web for your “followers” to read. So… Tweeting does not involve chirping, whortles, whistles, wings, feathers. No birds are harmed in the creation of any and all Tweets (so far as we know).

If reading the newspaper in the morning for your daily dose of news isn’t enough for you (and these days, there is ALOT of news!), then go to Twitter.  There you can follow constant updates on whatever is going on out in the big, bad world. All this talk of “following” and “followers” may connote some kind of cult, but really, it’s safe to drink the Twitter Kool-Aid. It’s all just a part of the Twit-cabulary. 

Once you dive into the Twitter world an unrelenting stream of Tweets may start to show up on your homepage telling you what your favorite celebrities are doing, what the New York Times is currently reporting, or (gasp!) what people you actually know are up to.  All this can actually be rewarding.  Twitter brings to you the wealth of the internet (should you choose to accept it) without making you go search it on your own. Good Luck!

Come on, if we at USDemocrazy can Tweet with the best of ‘em, it really can’t be that hard.

Share |
 
February
26

Full Court Press

by LegalEagle News


Welcome sports fans to another episode of Full Court Press!

They say never to talk about politics or religion, that you’ll just lose friends… but we here at USDemocrazy are going after both! In a recent Supreme Court ruling, Pleasant Grove City v. Summum (07-665), Justice Alito writes about the TEN COMMANDMENTS!  (Commandment number 11: Thou shalt be very careful when dealing with the Ten Commandments.)

He handed down an opinion that discusses free speech, a monument in Pleasant Grove City, Utah and those commanding Commandments. Head over to the NY Times to get the general gist of the case.

“Hold on!” you might say. Doesn’t that conflict with some kind of church and state and free speech and Charleton Heston kind of thing? Well SCOTUS blog breaks down the thought process pretty nicely:

“Government policy on placement of permanent markets [they're refering to a monument here] in a public park is, constitutionally speaking, a form of government speech [The monument isn't actually speaking... he's talking about what is being written on the monument] so there is no Free Speech Clause issue when a Ten Commandments monument [oh, THAT'S what is written on the monument] is accepted but a monument to a different religion is excluded. ” (Okay that is alot to chew on there… still pretty important stuff.)

Check out all of SCOTUS blog’s discussion on the case and the tight rope act of walking the Free Speech Clause and the Establishment Clause here! But more importantly, Justice Alito references John Lennon in the court opinion! The BLT has the scoop on that here!

Share |
 
February
23

Sticks and stones may break your bones…

by ForeverPlaid News

And words will hurt the economy…

Let’s talk for a minute about the recession… NO, LET’S NOT! That’s because all this talk of the economics could be damaging to your health!!! (Financial health, that is…)

The crack team at USDemocrazy has noticed that any time an Obama adminstration official starts to talk economics… the stock market screams, runs and hides!

Now the brainiacs at the New York Times have started to wonder if all this talk of America launching into a depression is going to, well, launch America into a depression. Same with the folks at New York Magazine who have dubbed the US economy’s weakened state “The Greatest Depression.” Newsweek is fielding questions on whether or not we are in a depression, and Google yields 68.5 million hits when you type in “Are we in a depression?”

There’s an old saying that goes, the economy is in recession when your neighbor loses his job, but there’s a depression on when you lose your job. Well, maybe if we all hush up about this lousy depression, maybe the economy will just stay in a lousy recession instead.

Okay… maybe this isn’t a good strategy. We at USDemocrazy think it is important to discuss issues like recessions and depressions… (But please don’t blame us if the market starts to fall!)

Photo courtesy New York Magazine

Share |
 
Newspapers are dying!
Do you care?

   Bankruptcy (aren’t we hearing that word a bit too much these days?) is spreading like the flu through the newspaper industry.
   Sick newspapers are laying off talented journalists and ceasing to print entire sections of their journals. People with money (and that does not include members of the USDemocrazy team) are scared to invest in the great american newspaper.
   Two smart guys, David Swenson and Michael Schmidt of the New York Times have a plan. They penned this op-ed  bemoaning the lack of profit in the industry. They suggest that newspapers become endowed entities like colleges and universities.  
   The truth of the matter is that our good old-fashioned newspapers are in trouble BIG TIME. readers like you are rapidly switching to (often) free online editions. So, how can newspapers stay alive, without profits from their print editions?
   Our friends Swenson and Schmidt hope the money will come from private donors, so we can all keep on enjoying the good old fashioned newspaper.
   You might be surprised to hear that reading the paper by computer is an idea that is older than the internet itself. A 1981 broadcast from San Francisco shows how people 28 years ago were contemplating this idea… though it was a lot more of a hassle and much more expensive than it is now. But still, progressive stuff, huh?
Share |