News

Patriotism isn’t passive. It isn’t blind loyalty, a bumper sticker, or a red-white-and-blue wardrobe. And it doesn’t belong to one party or worldview.
One, the bronzed billionaire of Queens. The other, a Ugandan-Indian-American democratic socialist from Astoria. And yet: ...
In the first of a three-part series Brendan O'Brien discusses the too-often tenuous relationship between sport and the ...
Pride Month tends to arrive in a confetti burst of color. Parades bring music, energy, and acceptance to the streets. But in ...
Tell me of a democratic government that consists only of saints. Israel’s government not being much better doesn’t give license to hate it. Tell me of a democracy that’s not ruined by capitalism. Just ...
The guy who made Tesla TSLA bumper stickers, criticizing Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s former role as head of the Trump administration’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency, did this and ...
Following Sen. Joni Ernst’s (R-Iowa) comment at a town hall that “we are all going to die,” Democratic lawmakers and strategists sharply criticized the Republican Party and recent Medicaid ...
As best as I could make it, it was Steve’s profile. Beneath the picture, Carole added a slogan, an idea borrowed from the bumper stickers she used to mail from her home.
Social media algorithms reinforce echo chambers, while physical signals such as car stickers or even political corflute signs signal belonging and in-group and out-group boundaries.
The activism targeting Tesla has had some impact, at least on Musk’s bottom line. Tesla stock remains down by about 47% from the highs seen in December, and there’s scope for further declines.