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In the December 6th edition of The Nation, a magazine I continue to get by snail mail so I can read it wherever I can pick it up, Eric Alterman has a thought-provoking piece reminding us that, despite some obvious miscalculations on the part of the president, we just might share some of the blame for the failures to reach the goals we thought we voted for in 2008.
here's a roadmap with the history to back it up. I just read this article in the print edition of The Nation, and I want everyone of you who is concerned about where our economy is going, and how all the threads of what Carol Shea Porter, Obama, and other Democrats who really care about the rest of us are trying to fix, to read this article. I do believe they are trying to fix it, but communicating the problem, how we got here, and the solutions is really hard in our media environment.
The Nation's Ari Melber has an article outlining a new study done by researchers at Harvard, Yale, and Berkeley. Titled A Tale of Two Blogospheres: Discursive Practices on the Left and Right, the study finds, among other things, that liberal blogs tend to use platforms that allow multiple authors to be featured, while conservative ones allow for one main writer and online newspaper style comments at the bottom, if that.
Vote in this Poll at The Nation - and check out actual responsible journalism. What a concept!
Ted Stevens is already a nationally known disgrace - voting in this poll can help elevate Sununu to the same national level of awareness. That kind of national grassroots awareness could translate into donations for Jeanne Shaheen.
John Nichols, writing for "The Nation", has just written a kind of intellectual "call to arms" regarding, what is quite possibly, the most important issue facing the United States right now: Iran.