Showing results for: group (page 329)
Top 1% fails to report over 20% of income using potentially “criminal” tactics: IRS analysis
Igor Derysh
Progressives have introduced a bill to boost IRS budget to increase audits of the rich and claw back $1.2 trillion
Evangelical theology, the poison of white male supremacy and the Georgia spa killings
Michael Rea
No one who understands evangelical theology can be surprised if sexual "sins" are seen as punishable by death
Hip-hop professor looks to open doors with world’s first peer-reviewed rap album
A.D. Carson
Can college professors rap their way into academic publishing? One professor makes an album to prove they can
This spring, it’s time for an herby, citrusy Green Goddess renaissance
Ashlie D. Stevens
The dressing was created in San Francisco in the 1920s and eventually took on a New Age California health food glow
Lab leak: a scientific debate mired in politics — and unresolved
Charles Schmidt
More than a year into the COVID pandemic, some scientists say the possibility of a lab leak never got a fair look
“The Simpsons” hasn’t declined due to bad writing; its outdated politics no longer make sense
Keith A. Spencer
The beloved sitcom reaches another milestone, but its nuclear family is trapped in a bubble that time forgot
“There’s no alternative”: Louisiana’s ambitious plan to stay above water
Zoya Teirstein
Louisiana has a $1.5 billion plan to slow sea-level rise and BP is paying for it
Immunocompromised people must be a priority in the COVID-19 vaccination effort
Francesco Zangari
Vaccinating immunocompromised people will both protect their health and slow viral evolution
HBO’s QAnon series “Q: Into the Storm” is a bewildering attempt to decode a super-conspiracy
Melanie McFarland
Cullen Hoback's six-part look at the QAnon conspiracy explains everything, all at once, and remains perplexing
Republicans’ serious health problem — opposing the vaccines
Terry H. Schwadron
It’s not enough that they won’t wear masks — now 30 million won’t get shots and threaten the rest of us
After the insurrection, America’s far-right groups get more extreme
Matthew Valasik, Shannon Reid
As right-wing groups reorganize after the Capitol riot, scholars of the movement foresee increased polarization
Can vaccination and infection rates add up to reach COVID herd immunity?
Carmen Heredia Rodriguez
Some experts are skeptical of the 60% threshold for herd immunity
The Nas generation of scholars: Finally, a Grammy for the hip hop artist who led me to liberation
Darryl Robertson
His discography gave me a blueprint, unleashing a flood of curiosity about Black history and literature
How the Nazis used music to celebrate and facilitate murder
Edward B. Westermann
Music is supposed to transcend the horrific. Yet it has also served as an accompaniment to torture and punishment
How Evangelicalism’s racist roots and purity culture teachings catalyzed the Atlanta killings
Ashlie D. Stevens
Long described his victims as “temptations” he needed to “eliminate,” rhetoric that is common in purity culture
The Trump health care policies that deserve to stick around
Elisabeth Rosenthal
Trump introduced policies on medical care and drug price transparency that are worth preserving
Joe Manchin’s filibuster demands might end up making Republican obstruction even worse
Igor Derysh
There's a very good reason Republican lawmakers “aren’t sweating a potential ‘talking filibuster’ reform”
7 ways to avoid becoming a misinformation superspreader
H. Colleen Sinclair
A social psychologist explains how to prevent yourself — and others — from spreading inaccurate information
Tucker Carlson is using the Atlanta spa shootings to downplay anti-Asian racism and white supremacy
Jon Skolnik
Fox News' top host has been busy trying to blame Black people for a rise in violence against Asian-Americans
Republicans are in disarray without Donald Trump – but that doesn’t mean they aren’t still a threat
Amanda Marcotte
The GOP is too distracted by relitigating Donald Trump's 2020 loss to fight against President Joe Biden's agenda
Scientists may have figured out how SARS-CoV-2 jumped from animals to humans
Matthew Rozsa
A WHO investigative team fixates on wildlife farms in China as a point of origin for the virus
The Biden administration increases the social cost of carbon
Ramin Skibba
A new policy brings back an old approach to tallying the cost of carbon, but critics say it has limitations
Can more farmers be convinced to conserve and restore wetlands?
Lela Nargi
How can we conserve what wetlands we've still got, and build others back?
The world moved online during the pandemic, and that’s just a start for better disability access
Ashlie D. Stevens
Cooking classes, watching new movies, and touring museums from home is now possible – but could be more inclusive
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