Obama’s fables
Remember Aesop’s Fables? The rabbit learned that slow and steady wins the race. The boy who cried wolf learned he shouldn’t lie. And we learned these lessons.
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Remember Aesop’s Fables? The rabbit learned that slow and steady wins the race. The boy who cried wolf learned he shouldn’t lie. And we learned these lessons.
Walking along the promenade at Venice Beach over break, I noticed something unnerving. Amid artists spray-painting Bob Marley, doctors issuing marijuana prescriptions and overwhelmed tourists lurked a void almost as palpable — a lack of interaction.
Comfortable clothes are corrupting society. Gym shorts, spandex, tank tops — they’ve wormed their way into the workplace, dinner parties and everywhere else they don’t belong. Fashion is dead.
Leaders and journalists worldwide agree that terrorism poses an enormous threat. But while searching for defense, they often fail to examine the concept’s construction.
An American official in Pakistan triggered more than bullets when he shot two Pakistani citizens in January. The fiery standoff between the U.S. and its Middle Eastern ally will continue through and beyond February.
Greedy corporations have replaced true love with shameless materialism! Today’s hearts are sold, not won! Consumerism has consumed Valentine’s Day!
A few weeks ago, I stumbled upon an online petition that declared, “If you're eating at Chick-fil-A, you're also eating at an establishment that partners with some of the most ferocious anti-gay groups around.”
Should the U.S. construct a new immigrant work visa system? Should we continue to discourage Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak from running for re-election? Should we grant asylum to foreigners persecuted for sexual orientation without proof of homosexuality?
From “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader” and “Street Smarts” to failblog.org and the infamous “Darwin Awards,” the media demonstrates an uncanny ability to capitalize on stupidity.
An African woman can hardly believe that despite her uncut genitals, American author Katherine A. Dettwyler still managed to find a husband. In “Dancing Skeletons: Life and Death in West Africa,” Dettwyler explores female genital cutting, or FGC, under a spotlight of culture clash.
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