The problem with this oppositional framing is that
it isn’t true. In reality, marriage equality and religious liberty can support
and strengthen each other. And this is true even when people are conflicted about
same-sex marriage. Even then, they still believe that gay and lesbian couples
should be treated fairly under the law.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Sally Steenland: Religious liberty + marriage equality = Harmony, not dissension
Sometimes the way an issue is framed matters as much
as the facts. Take the so-called battle between marriage equality and religious
liberty. Many activists against marriage equality claim that the two are
inherently opposed to each other. According to their argument, if one side
wins, the other loses.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Eric Alterman: The mainstream media and the slowly boiling frog
Late August is when Americans tend to take their
relatively meager vacations—workers in other social democracies tend to enjoy
six paid weeks of vacation rather than just two weeks, a tendency that American
news rarely recognizes. Since the vacation-bound mainstream media is
preoccupied with Egypt, Syria, Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, Obamacare, and
a possible government shutdown, the fact that the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report was leaked to Reuters and The New York
Times will almost certainly fall through the cracks.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Michael Josephson: Competition in the arts
Competition often brings out the best performance
but it doesn’t always bring out the best in people.
Even in the arts, actors, singers, dancers, and
musicians must survive and thrive in a competitive community as rude and rough
as any. Ambitious parents often introduce toxic gamesmanship and back-biting
attitudes very early as their children are judged and ranked by the awards they
receive, the parts they get, and the schools they are admitted to.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Scott Lilly: The choice Congress won’t face up to
Back in college, I had a textbook entitled Decision
by Debate. The underlying premise of the book was that if you had a good
debate, you were likely to end up with a good decision. It strikes me that the
inverse of this lesson – that if you have a bad debate, you’ll end up with a
bad decision – may explain much of the problem this country is having with
budget policy.
Much of what is commonly being said about the
federal budget – including the causes of the mismatch of revenues and expenditures and the options we
have for resolving that imbalance – is either mischaracterization or flatly
wrong. When you slice through all the heated rhetoric, the budgetary choices we
face may be painful, but they are actually much simpler to make than the debate
would suggest.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Steve Flowers: Inside the Statehouse: College football is king in Alabama
As we approach Labor Day, foremost on most
Alabamians’ minds is the beginning of college football season. Traditionally,
Labor Day has also marked the kickoff of the political campaign season.
As we head into the Labor Day weekend of 2013, my
suspicion is that more of you are excited about this Saturday’s first games of
the season than who is going to run for governor or any other state office.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Jacob G. Hornberger: The dictatorial power to punish a dictator
President Obama is considering what military action
the U.S. government should take against Syria in retaliation for its purported
use of chemical weapons against the Syrian people. At the risk of asking an
indelicate question, where in the Constitution does it authorize the president
to undertake such action?
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Robert Wilkerson: Good news, bad news
There is a great deal of good news for almost all
Americans. Unemployment is coming down. Last month our workforce increased by
175,000 jobs. Over the past four years, the unemployment rate is down from 10%
to only 7.6% in Alabama.
Home prices have risen and continue to rise. This
makes it possible for homeowners to recover some of the value lost during and
after the Great Recession. Home prices in April rose 12.1%, which was the
largest year-to-year increase since 2006. Factories are getting more orders.
Production is increasing. People are returning to work, and new jobs are being
created.
Friday, August 23, 2013
Emily Goff: The top 10 ways Washington wastes money
Whether it’s negotiating over how much to spend on
government operations or the government’s borrowing limit, we hear a familiar
refrain in Washington these days: There is absolutely no room to cut federal
spending. This is not the case.
Many people remember the millions spent on the
infamous “Bridge to Nowhere.” But how about the millions of dollars in federal
spending on caviar promotion, keeping empty bank accounts open, and creating
“Star Trek” parody videos? Yes, those are a few examples of your tax dollars at
work.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
The March on Washington: Looking back on 50 years
August 28 marks the 50th anniversary of the March on
Washington. It is a time to celebrate a movement, a speech, and leaders who
influenced generations of people around the globe and achieved genuine progress
for diverse groups of Americans.
There is no doubt that America has come a long way
since the civil rights era. But while the indignities of segregated public
accommodations have largely disappeared, another significant theme of the march
remains highly relevant half a century later: the struggle for economic
opportunity and equality. It was perhaps due to the march and the great success
of the larger civil rights movement that opposition to this sort of equality
was immediate, persists to this day, and is reflected in all three branches of
the federal government.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Michael Josephson: Why are young people so cynical?
Agree or disagree? “In today’s society, one has to
lie or cheat at least occasionally in order to succeed.”
This is a fundamental and revealing question on our
surveys about personal ethics and integrity. Most interesting is that the level
of cynicism is closely related to age. In an online survey on integrity (with
16,000 responses) we found that 43 percent of the respondents age 17 and under
(there were 862 of them) believe lying is sometimes necessary, 35 percent of
those in the 18-24 age group agreed, and 21 percent of those 25-40 agreed. But
the percentage drops sharply after that: 12 percent of those 41-50, and only 10
percent of those over 50, think lying is necessary to success. (By the way, the
survey is available here if you want to take it yourself.)
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