Monday!
* Steve Benen covers the behind-the-scenes wrangling around the public option. Surprising to see a hack like Bill Frist on board. Is he trying to make up for his past?
* io9's ten essential Superman stories. Missing: Alan Moore's Supreme, Superman in all but name. (Also: Kingdom Come? Dark Knight Returns?)
* Conservatives have finally gotten around to removing the Bible's liberal bias.
* The life story of Richard Leroy Walters, a homeless man who left $4 million dollars to NPR.
* Superhero Status Updates.
* The waking nightmare of sleep paralysis.
* And Angel is ten years old today.
Showing posts with label NPR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NPR. Show all posts
Monday, October 05, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:52 PM
|
Labels: Alan Moore, Angel, Barack Obama, Bill Frist, conservatives, Facebook, health care, homelessness, Joss Whedon, NPR, politics, public option, sleep, superheroes, Superman, the bible
Thursday, September 11, 2008
'The Crisis of American Profligacy': Andrew J. Bacevich talks about his new book, The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism, on NPR. They've got excerpts from the first chapter, too:
The ethic of self-gratification threatens the well-being of the United States. It does so not because Americans have lost touch with some mythical Puritan habits of hard work and self-abnegation, but because it saddles us with costly commitments abroad that we are increasingly ill-equipped to sustain while confronting us with dangers to which we have no ready response. As the prerequisites of the American way of life have grown, they have outstripped the means available to satisfy them. Americans of an earlier generation worried about bomber and missile gaps, both of which turned out to be fictitious. The present- day gap between requirements and the means available to satisfy those requirements is neither contrived nor imaginary. It is real and growing. This gap defines the crisis of American profligacy.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:08 PM
|
Labels: America, American exceptionalism, consumer culture, ecology, empire, empire of consumption, NPR, politics, Ret. Col. Andrew Bacevich, the crisis of American proligacy