AltWeeklies Wire

John McCain and the Doomsday Mobnew

With the primary contest behind him, McCain is now gearing up to run against "hope" and "change." In this broader race, lunatic pastors like John Hagee and Rod Parsley become extremely burdensome liabilities. So -- wink wink -- they get cut loose, at least for the next few months until they're needed again.
Artvoice  |  Michael I. Niman  |  06-02-2008  |  Commentary

Meet Richard Price: Electrotechnologist, Purveyor of Rare Flowers, Famous For His Heirloom Tomatoesnew

Price could be known for many things. Among other things, he's a talented singer; an accomplished portrait photographer; a home brewer of beers, ciders, and wines; an experienced electrotechnologist in genetics; a green thumb; a do-it-yourselfer and traditionalist. In fact, it's mostly by a strange turn of plant evolution that he's come to be known, informally, as "the tomato man."
Artvoice  |  Peter Koch  |  05-16-2008  |  Food+Drink

Read 'Bad Money' and Weepnew

After reading the new book by Kevin Phillips, a painful realization dawns: Not one of the people running for president is addressing how interconnected and serious America's economic, ecological, and security problems are. Worse, the bankers and hedge-fund speculators who created the credit crisis are financing the campaigns of Democrats -- the only politicians likely ever to rein them in.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  05-16-2008  |  Nonfiction

Chives: A Sign of Springnew

Along with onions, garlic, and other pungent shoots and bulbs -- oddly including asparagus -- chives are part of the allium, or lily, family. Includes recipes for Chive and White Bean Hummus and Pan Roast Salmon with Chive Beurre Blanc.
Artvoice  |  Joe George  |  05-16-2008  |  Food+Drink

The Oil Crossroads: Gold for Highways, Pennies for Public Transportationnew

Growth will only come to a city near you if the federal government is led by somebody who connects the climate-change dots with the oil dots and the public-transportation dots.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  05-16-2008  |  Environment

Old Networks vs. New in the Democratic Primarynew

We used to call them Reagan Democrats. Nowadays the national media have taken to calling them the "white working class." In the South, they're called Bubba. In 2008, they are the key to victory.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  05-12-2008  |  Politics

Verizon Says No to Trans-Inclusive Policynew

What would make a company who ranked number one on DiversityInc's "Top 50 Companies for Diversity" the past two years take a less than favorable action on a policy to included gender identity and expression in its non-dsicrimination policy?
Artvoice  |  Bryan Whitley-Grassi  |  05-12-2008  |  LGBT

From Haiti to Laos, People Are Starvingnew

Our food production and distribution networks are intertwined with mindboggling complexity. People across the world are all showing up hungry at the same global supermarket and bidding against each other for what's left on half-stocked shelves, or locked up in overstocked back rooms. But the playing field isn't level.
Artvoice  |  Michael I. Niman  |  05-12-2008  |  Food+Drink

Our Presidential Candidates Won't Talk About the Death of Cities -- Will Our Governors?new

Americans tend to believe that sprawl is a natural consequence of "free market" forces when, in fact, it is a consequence of governmental decision-making. Alas, the people who would lead our national government are not addressing sprawl. That means that the long-avoided discussions America ought to have on race, climate change, energy, highway construction, and agriculture will all continue to lack a certain element of reality.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  04-25-2008  |  Housing & Development

'Unsettled' Turns to Gazanew

Unsettled has an involving, sometimes engrossing and almost tragic human interest appeal but the movie is, perhaps unavoidably, skewed. No Palestinian appears. And looming just over the historical horizon is the monster problem no Israeli government has had the will or desire to address: the quarter-million Jewish settlers in the contested West Bank.
Artvoice  |  George Sax  |  04-25-2008  |  Reviews

On the Tradition of Winemakingnew

Nowadays there are so few wines made from estate-grown fruit that it's a bit like finding a four-leaf clover -- but is my admiration for grapes grown, juiced, and fermented by the same individuals justified?
Artvoice  |  Paula Paradise  |  04-25-2008  |  Food+Drink

Ralph Nader On the Decision to Run for President Againnew

"I was looking at my position papers from '04, and almost without exception everything is worse," says Nader, whose long career as a consumer rights advocate is now overshadowed by his runs for the presidency in 2000 and 2004.
Artvoice  |  Geoff Kelly  |  04-25-2008  |  Politics

America After Bush: Truth and Reconciliationnew

Let's assume for the moment that this reign ends on January 20, 2009 -- an assumption that could only become reality if the American people stand up and actively defend our embattled democracy. The question then becomes, what's next?
Artvoice  |  Michael I. Niman  |  04-18-2008  |  Commentary

How Class Caricatures Could Blow it for the Democratsnew

Democrats have a problem explaining progressive economic policies when they've been successfully caricatured as cultural elitists and snobs who sneer at the tastes, faith, gender roles, and economic aspirations of working people. Thus the unfortunate vulnerability of Barack Obama.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  04-18-2008  |  Commentary

What About John McCain's Pastors?new

The GOP's propaganda wing has successfully shifted the election focus away from our endless wars and our imploding economy and environment, over to Barack Obama's pastor. Lost amid this newfound obsession was any mention of John McCain's two lunatic preachers.
Artvoice  |  Michael I. Niman  |  03-28-2008  |  Commentary

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