Showing results for: group (page 681)
Explaining the rise in hate crimes against Muslims in the US
Brian Levin
The way politicians speak about terrorist attacks is related to their prevalence
Weaving architecture, history and social justice together, Chicago is imagined anew in “No Small Plans”
Mark Peters
The graphic novel shakes up the format of the civic primer with illustrations and characters that jump off the page
Forging an individual identity when the group is all anybody, inside or out, wants to talk about: S.K. Ali’s YA novel “Saints and Misfits”
Emily Jordan
A YA novel that explores faith, divorce and the repercussions of sexual assault in a tight-knit Muslim community
A Supreme Court ruling has led to trademark requests for the n-word
Alessandra Maldonado
A groundbreaking decision may allow individuals to capitalize on the racial slur
Does William Shatner’s attack on “SJWs” erase his “Star Trek” legacy?
Matthew Rozsa
The erstwhile Captain Kirk is angering progressive Trekkies with his tweets, but the situation isn't that simple
The conflicts of interest hiding behind pro-pipeline op-eds around the country
Eric Hananoki
Pennsylvania publication bans retired general after he failed to disclose ties to pipeline company
Is this Trump’s worst-ever Twitter move? Threatening Congress could become an epic disaster
Bob Cesca
In a new tweet-burst, Trump threatens to cut off health care for Congress and staffers. Let's see how that works!
Burning Raqqa: The civilian toll on the U.S.’ latest anti-ISIS strategy
Laura Gottesdiener
The U.S. war against civilians in Syria
Donald Trump could see a bump in approval ratings — but won’t like how to do it
Lena Groeger
How the immigration effect impacts President Trump
A new parent’s guide to social media
Caroline Knorr
Learn to navigate the ever-shifting landscape of social media safely and responsible
The hidden extra costs of living with a disability
Sophie Mitra, Daniel Mont, Hoolda Kim, Michael Palmer, Nora Groce
One in seven adults have some form of disability — some will pay thousands more per year than their healthy peers
The Afghan Whigs’ Greg Dulli on keeping it “fun” after death of a beloved bandmate and 30 years of touring
Annie Zaleski
After the loss of guitarist Dave Rosser, the beloved '90s band drops a new album and soldiers on
The facts about online predators every parent should know
Christine Elgersma
Talking to kids about online predators gives them the tools they need to handle themselves in a web-based world
Why do we care who Banksy is?
Noah Charney
Last month, DJ Goldie might have revealed the elusive street artist's secret identity. But so what?
“Rep” of Anthony Scaramucci threatens to leak oppo on Reince Priebus regarding an alleged affair
Taylor Link
Priebus has shown loyalty since he was ousted from the White House, but that good will only earned him blackmail
Fight for your right to fix your own iPhone
Jim Hightower
The "Right-to-Repair" movement fights corporate rules that keep you from fixing your own broken stuff
This Kansas City neighborhood wrote the blueprint for transforming a community
Nikhil Swaminathan
How residents rallied together to transform a decaying neighborhood into a thriving community
A radical new approach to the immigration “problem”: Beyond left and right, Trumpism and neoliberalism — Part one
Anis Shivani
Our immigration crisis is a major human rights catastrophe, and must be faced in those terms: Part one of a series
GOP county chair hosting Roger Stone thinks his McCain attacks are inappropriate (but will say so only by accident)
Eric Hananoki
An Arizona Republican was fine with trashing John McCain behind his back
Author Tom Nichols on how Trump won: “People looked up from their phones and said, ‘Where’s my money?'”
Chauncey DeVega
Author of "The Death of Expertise" on how narcissism, stupidity and the internet got us an accidental president
The unsustainable whiteness of green
Nikhil Swaminathan
Communities of color strongly support the environmental movement — but why aren't they represented?
Trump insists his health care plan isn’t dead, three Senate Republicans think they have a solution: Report
Charlie May
Sen. Lindsey Graham is working with colleagues on a plan he says will repeal and replace Obamacare
“Drunk, obnoxious, smart but not pretentious”: The long, low history of the word “punk”
Nicholas Rombes
Popular music's scuzziest four-letter word was in use hundreds of years before The Ramones exploded onto the scene
Los Angeles’ groundbreaking “recycLA” program dumps the dump
Dean Kuipers
Cities can learn from LA — going green saves the planet and coffers — adding 20,000 jobs and 650M in activity
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