With great vision, comes some delusion
Josh Harris is one of the most important Internet innovators that you have never heard of.
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Josh Harris is one of the most important Internet innovators that you have never heard of.
The midterm elections dominated the news scene last week and seem to have left the newsmakers with a bit of a hangover. It is not that news is not happening; it is just nothing seems as satisfying as politics. The feeling I am suggesting here is indescribable, but it probably would be familiar to the Romans after festivities at the Colosseum. Just ask teary-eyed John Boehner, who after all of it just really cares a lot about the American people.
Did you know 20 percent of your genes have already been patented? While that may sound odd, it is true.
The reporting of a string of suicides has rocked our national consciousness in the last two weeks. In the drive to define the issue and find a solution, the national response has been off the mark and incomplete.
There are few sure things in Washington, D.C., politics. Midterm election drama, and the legislative stagnation that comes with partisan politics this time of year, is a sure thing. The future projections of the growing national debt are also a sure thing.
Last week marked the announcement of this year’s Nobel prizes in medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and peace.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, an admitted steroid user and Hollywood film star, a man who has a stadium in Vienna named after him and one of the few legitimate candidates for the title “most interesting man in the world,” made minor history Oct. 1 when he signed California Senate Bill 1449 into law.
May the real patriots please stand up?
Urbanites everywhere, from San Francisco to New York City and Brisbane to Brussels, celebrated International PARK(ing) Day Sept. 17.
Whether it is trying to find out gifts ahead of time or trying to stop a terrorist, most people, at some point, find themselves in a situation where they wish they could read another person's mind. Thanks to the work of Northwestern University psychology professor J. Peter Rosenfeld, this fantasy is just a bit closer to becoming a reality.
This may be news to some, but companies like Facebook and Google collect and store information for future use.
Ferraris, Bugattis, and Lamborghinis have descended upon the streets of London this past summer, according to John Burn's article "Super Cars Inspire Mixed Feelings in London.”
Underage drinking will always be a part of the growth, learning and experimentation that takes place in college. This does not make it any less illegal, as there are national, state and local laws that reflect how those governing bodies have decided to prohibit those under 21 from alcohol. But regardless of what people believe about the wisdom of this prohibition, it is up to the local police to decide how these laws are enforced.
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