All the Way to Memphis
How Confederate statues in Memphis illustrate the GOP’s shift from champion of States’ and small government to the party of big, top-down government.
All the Way to Memphis Read More »
How Confederate statues in Memphis illustrate the GOP’s shift from champion of States’ and small government to the party of big, top-down government.
All the Way to Memphis Read More »
Start your week with all the hottest gossip on everything from the Prince Harry-Meghan Markle wedding to select apparatuses of Foucaultian biopower!
It takes a lot of courage to come forward. More courage, quite frankly, than most people have. You need to be more courageous than me, maybe than you too.
Be Thankful for These Women Read More »
Would Dems disown accused sexual predators who weren’t celebrities, but actual high ranking politicians advancing their agenda? I hope so, but I’m not sure.
Louis CK and Roy Moore Walk into a Bar Read More »
AIM’s brash and confrontational Red Power movement did for Indigenous Americans precisely what Black Power did for African Americans.
In Memoriam: Dennis Banks Read More »
Most white Americans worry about racism against white people. That’s not only predictable, it’s actually a fundamental precondition for white racism to exist.
How to be Racist in Today’s America Read More »
The conflicted legacy of Hugh Hefner, legendary pipe-smoking, pajama-wearing publisher, lothario, and founder of Playboy Magazine.
In Memoriam: Hugh Hefner Read More »
Almost everyone involved in the current debate over NFL protests is a sinner in the eyes of my 6th grade English teacher.
Shut Up, It’s the Flag! Read More »
Not that 77 million people age 20-37 need a cranky, middle aged man like me to defend them, but here I go.
Yes, I’m Defending the Millennials, Goddammit Read More »
White America canonizes white martyrs of racial violence, but largely ignores black victims unless black media force us to recognize them. Here’s why.
Charlottesville, Heather Heyer, and America’s Quest for White Martyrs of Racial Violence Read More »
The Public Professor