The events of the last week in Egypt raise a whole host of questions.
if reports are to be believed, there is a coup d’etat underway in Egypt.
Yesterday saw some of the biggest protests ever to rock Egypt. Where does it go from here?
A thirteen hour filibuster by Wendy Davis ran out the clock on a special session of the Texas legislature, apparently defeating an abortion bill that passed 19-10 after time expired.
A major Constitutional ruling from the Supreme Court.
A new blog, Rejection Letters of the Philosophers, “imagin[es] what the greats of history might have been faced with, had they been forced to publish or perish.”
As of today, John Dingell has been a Member of Congress for 20,997 days, a new record. That’s not something to celebrate.
It would be nice if columnists for major newspapers would consult political science, rather than Hollywood, for their understanding of our system.
Because sometimes poorly contructed observations can set a fellow to writing.
One Virginia Republican Member of Congress recently got a lesson in what going against the GOP’s hyperpartisan atmosphere feels like.
Election rules should be oriented towards increasing participation, not based on partisan calculations.
Providing a little context for Pope Francis’ background+Erick Erickson needs to learn a little history.
Reminding government employees that they are employees of the government is suddenly controversial.
The anti-communist icon is once again in hot water for making idiotic comments.
The regime we fought for in Iraq is now aiding the regime we’re fighting against (at least by proxy) in Syria.
The government of Malaysia paid a lot of money to get some blogs placed at various outlets.
Silly things members of Congress say (plus musings on authoritarianism).
The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether limits on contributions to political candidates is Constitutional.
The smear campaign against defense secretary nominee Chuck Hagel has taken a bizarre turn.
Andrew Bacevich bemoans the social impact of the all-volunteer force.
Despite some tough questions, Congressional Republicans didn’t land a glove on Secretary of State Clinton.
For the New Year, how about challenging your ideas just a little bit?
Representative democracy is a process of delegation of power to agents who act on behalf of citizens. The process of delegation matters.
There are factions of the American right that really need to understand this.
Conor Friedersdorf contends “The U.S. Already Had a Conversation About Guns—and the Pro Side Won.”