What does the physical resurrection of Jesus mean for our troubled and broken world?
Everyone who is thinking of getting dogs should read this because they need to understand this reality: I am a 21st century dog I’m a Malinois Overskilled among dogs, I excel in all disciplines, and I’m always ready to work. I NEED to work. But nowadays I get asked to chill on the couch all […]
Nobody Should Be Losing to Donald Trump. So What’s Going On?Continue reading on Eudaimonia and Co
A 21st-Century Battle Wouldn't Happen Like This -- Right? (First column, 7th story, link) Related stories:'CIVIL WAR' First Reactions: 'Scary As Hell Cautionary Tale'Director Issues Stark Warning
The Bush tax cuts didn’t fully phase in until 2010. In that year, an earlier CBPP reporthad noted, the Bush cuts raised the after-tax incomes of America’s richest 1 percent by 6.7 percent. In that same year, the Bush tax cuts inched up the after-tax incomes of the nation’s poorest 20 percent by just 1 percent. The Trump tax cut in 2017 simply magnified that reward-the-rich trend. Top 1-percenters now stand to gain, on average, an estimated $61,090 in 2025 from the Trump tax giveaway More
An overlooked and long-neglected type of forest has vast capacity to rebound, enhancing species diversity and resilience to climate change, according to an international team of forest scientists.
Hope or despair? A novelist ponders the future.
Countries and companies are now preparing and forming international
Our weekly roundup of the best new music with songs from Tyla, Illit, Waxahatchee, Tei Shi, and more.
Is the all-new Dodge Charger the most handsome muscle coupe of the last 24 years, or would the recently departed Chevy Camaro or Ford's 2005 Mustang get your vote?
Dakota Johnson is continuing her Roman holiday, and who better to show her around town than former Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele? Johnson and Michele strolled around the Italian capital—where
The Irish author, whose novel won the inaugural Nero Gold Prize, believes that no book can ignore the subjectNo novelist, whatever the main subject of their work, should ignore climate change, argues Paul Murray, the author who has just received one of Britain and Ireland’s top literary prizes for The Bee Sting.“I wouldn’t say climate worry was the motivation for my book, but I really do feel like it is the unavoidable background for being alive in the 21st century. I don’t want to get on a soap...