From 1935 to 1939, excluding 1938, Neutrality Acts legislation to try and keep the United States out of war were passed on a wave of isolationism in the wake of World War I. Spurred on by the belief that U.S. engagement had started through loans and trades with the allies and driven ...
Weeks later, with someone who knew her as well as I did, and with no idea of what I could possibly begin to say, a provisional apophatic eulogy was drafted, going something like this: Anna Reinelt was someone who wanted to leave the world a better place than she found it, and she a...
From 1935 to 1939, excluding 1938, Neutrality Acts legislation to try and keep the United States out of war were passed on a wave of isolationism in the wake of World War I. Spurred on by the belief that U.S. engagement had started through loans and trades with the allies and driven ...
From 1935 to 1939, excluding 1938, Neutrality Acts legislation to try and keep the United States out of war were passed on a wave of isolationism in the wake of World War I. Spurred on by the belief that U.S. engagement had started through loans and trades with the allies and driven b...
In effect, Brown here is espousing institutional neutrality, refusing to make political statements through investing or divesting. (Brown does not appear onFIRE’s list of 22 collegesbesides the University of Chicago that have adopted a Kalven-like institutional neutrality.) ...
When talking about innovation generally I liked Ted’s toss-off line, “People are always happy with what they’ve got.” He said it in relation to the Steve Jobs quote that “People don’t know what they want until you show it to them,” but it struck me as an observation even mor...
From 1935 to 1939, excluding 1938, Neutrality Acts legislation to try and keep the United States out of war were passed on a wave of isolationism in the wake of World War I. Spurred on by the belief that U.S. engagement had started through loans and trades with the allies and driven ...
So then, what if there’s something to all of this?What if there might really not be a chicken and an egg here?Did innate “toxicity” create the need to neuter men? Or is it that men who feel neutered turn toxic? As a practical example, consider the case of a woman who berates ...
, they would apparently count as "legitimate" opposition to net neutrality rules in AT&T's analysis. The Emprata study examined fake e-mail addresses and duplicate addresses, but did not mention the problem of identities from data breaches being used to fake opposition to net neutrality rules....
– One might well follow the question whether he himself did act according to that as his threatening to ban me was evidently not based on “assume good faith.” (but rather assuming who know what evil from my side). But the issue has been cleared and apology was offered, hence the ...