"Those who doubted whether Iraq or the world would be better off without Saddam Hussein, and those who believe today that we are not safer with his capture, don't have the judgment to be president or the credibility to be elected president" - December 16, 2003Cool blog btw!
You may think you know everything there is to know about Martin Luther King Jr., the legendary American human rights leader whose powerful speeches and tireless activism changed the course of history. But did you know that MLK Jr. was only 15 when he graduated from high school, or that he had a close relationship with baseball icon Jackie Robinson? These are just a few of the surprising and lesser-known facts about this iconic figure. Read on for 10 things you may not have known about Martin Luther King Jr. 10 - On April 14, 1967, at Stanford University, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered a powerful and emotive speech that exposed the dark reality of "The Other America." This was not the land of opportunity and prosperity that many believed it to be, but a desolate landscape of poverty and inequality where countless individuals were denied their basic rights and the ability to make a decent living. With a fire in his voice, King implored his audience to open their eyes and...
What if reading was just the start of thinking? For a while now, My Right Mind has been a bit of a wandering space. Ideas, half-built frameworks, things I was curious about but couldn’t quite stick the landing on. Maybe you’ve been there too—where you’re thinking through something, but it hasn’t clicked yet. This might be one of those clicks. Lately I’ve been digging into an old-but-powerful reading method by Eugene Schwartz—not a curriculum exactly, more like a framework for how the mind builds meaning through stories. It’s called the "Blank Sheet" method, and at first glance it looks simple: you hear a story, recall the main thought, outline it, retell it. But when you go deeper, it’s really about training the mind to think structurally—to hold, compress, and recreate meaning from the inside out. I’m starting to see it less as a reading strategy and more as a thinking system . A quiet, recursive method for shaping attention, memory, and thought. And it feels like the ...
If you believe the Democratic Party cares one iota about civil liberties, I've got some slaves in Mauritania that I can sell you. By Ann Coulter Wed Dec 21, 8:21 PM ET Apart from the day The New York Times goes out of business -- and the stellar work Paul Krugman's column does twice a week helping people house-train their puppies -- the newspaper has done the greatest thing it will ever do in its entire existence. (Calm down: No, the Times didn't hold an intervention for Frank Rich.) Monday's Times carried a major expose on child molesters who use the Internet to lure their adolescent prey into performing sex acts for Webcams. In the course of investigating the story, reporter Kurt Eichenwald broke open a massive network of pedophiles, rescued a young man who had been abused for years, and led the Department of Justice to hundreds of child molesters. I kept waiting for the catch, but apparently the Times does not yet believe pedophilia is covered by the "privac...
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"Those who doubted whether Iraq or the world would be better off without Saddam Hussein, and those who believe today that we are not safer with his capture, don't have the judgment to be president or the credibility to be elected president" - December 16, 2003Cool blog btw!