Sentences with phrase «writes on politics»

He also writes on politics, from a conservative point of view; and on religion, from a traditional Roman Catholic perspective.
«It's certainly something we have to take seriously and think through now,» said Marcy Darnovsky, who writes on the politics of human biotechnology as executive director of the Center for Genetics and Society in Berkeley, California.
He has written biographies of Thomas Carlyle, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Enoch Powell, and reviews and writes on politics for the New Statesman.
Originally from the West Midlands, she writes on politics, welfare and lifestyle.
He wrote on politics and invertebrates with equal passion.
Over the last five years, there have been several wonderful books written on the politics of education reform and the best of them all have a chapter on Wendy Kopp and TFA.
I'm not intending on writing on politics as a regular habit at Aleph Blog, and most of what I am going to say is economics - related, so please bear with me.
«â $ ¦ Over the years, Mark's writing on politics, arts and culture has been published in almost every major newspaper around the English - speaking world.»
In the course of researching a book I wrote on the politics of climate change, I came upon a confidential report prepared by the Office of National Assessments (ONA) entitled Fossil fuels and the greenhouse effect.
He has written on politics, the arts, travel and society for publications such as «The Big Issue» and «Which?»

Not exact matches

He also wrote that his fellow libertarians were on a «fool's errand» trying to achieve their ends through political means: «In our time, the great task for libertarians is to find an escape from politics in all its forms — from the totalitarian and fundamentalist catastrophes to the unthinking demos that guides so - called «social democracy.»»
He's known for his writing on race and politics — so it makes sense that his latest project, a comic book series for Marvel called «Black Panther,» is about the first black superhero in mainstream U.S. comics.
«The deal represents a sudden and stunning turn of events for The Post, Washington's leading newspaper for decades and a powerful force in shaping the nation's politics and policy,» Washington Post reporter Paul Farhi wrote on WashingtonPost.com today.
Bill Tieleman is a regular Tyee contributor who writes a column on B.C. politics every Tuesday in 24 Hours newspaper.
Duncan Cameron is president emeritus of rabble.ca and writes a weekly column on politics and current affairs.
Previously, I wrote the Politics on TV column for Macleans.ca, I was a contributor to the Xtra chain, which included maintaining a political blog for the Xtra.ca website, and I also served as the Political Editor for Outlooks — Canada's GLBT Magazine.
Ric is a veteran journalist who got his start reporting from the tobacco fields of southwestern Ontario, but came to Edmonton in the early 1980s to cover politics and other matters for Alberta Report, where he rose to executive editor, before moving on to senior writing and editing positions with Maclean's Magazine in Toronto and the Globe and Mail in Vancouver.
Elsewhere are the lyrics Jimi Hendrix wrote for the song «Machine Gun,» in their original form on hotel room stationary, and a letter that the FBI's Hoover wrote to former President Gerald Ford while Ford was still just a Michigan congressman, ranting about the MC5 while calling them «the house band of the radical White Panther Party» and complaining that music was fueling the decade's radical politics.
The bishop, who was born in Bromley, Kent, went on to write Market Whys And Human Wherefores: Thinking Again About Markets, Politics, And People about the deficiencies of economic theory.
Whether one agrees with his politics or thinks he'd be a competent president is a different matter — but thank you for writing a great article on religion and avoiding the attacking, degrading and slandering of other writers» approach, which - while probably provoking interest and getting many reads - is simply disappointing and quite frankly hypocritical when it comes to religion.
Shadowplay highlights the wealth of contemporary allusion surrounding Portia's espousal to Bassanio, designed to remind the Queen of her allegorical flirtation with England» and before Jacobs ridicules the idea of a lost level of meaning in which Bassanio represents Elizabeth's subjects, a reviewer who professes to respect the «various forms and genres and techniques of literary writing» will be aware that poems and plays in the mid-sixteenth century regularly celebrated England's courtship of the monarch, and that literary characters representing England were commonplace, though disguised in order to subvert the ban on discussing contemporary politics and religion.
He's written a national newspaper column on the philosophy of football, and recently he's spoken out on politics.
Richard Crouter, author of «Reinhold Niebuhr, on Politics, Religion, and Christian Faith,» writes that he wants to explain Niebuhr to «non-specialists» interested in his relevance for today.
Spanning the entire spectrum of creation, whether in terms of sex, politics, or religion, Christians affirm that God is speaking through the law written on human hearts, with individual consciences picking up the signals, either accusing or excusing them, until that day when God will finally judge all things by the criterion of Jesus Christ (Romans 1:15 — 16).
Italian intellectual Augusto Del Noce wrote some of the best analysis anywhere of technology's impact on Western politics, economics, and culture.
This may be a character flaw in someone who writes autobiographies purporting to be true accounts, although even on that score more charitable interpretations are possible (politics of any sort didn't seem to be very important in the life and thinking of Eliade).
They're the ones on Facebook who are constantly writing updates on Facebook about the negative tone of politics but ignoring any real issues — even when those issues center around the Christian's call to care for the poor, love their enemies and care for strangers.
I get the sense that many people who write about politics for a living have judged the mass of Trump supporters on the basis of their experiences with the scum of the internet.
I once got into a lot of trouble when, writing on the judicial usurpation of politics in First Things, I said we should be concerned about the possibility that many Americans might one day conclude that the motto «God and country» has been changed to the question «God or country».
For the detail, see Michael Fumento's «Politics and Church Burnings» in the October Commentary or, if you really want the full story, write the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD) at 1521 16th Street NW, Washington D.C. 20036.
Ralf Dahrendorf, writing in the New York Times, reflects on Weber's notion of politics and comments that «Havel's every page breathes the spirit that made him the authentic spokesman of the Eastern European revolution of 1989, which was in his words about «living in truth.»
For the past decade E.J. Dionne has written a column on politics for the Washington Post that has been syndicated to more than 90 other newspapers.
defining moment came in the late 1970s and early 1980s when what Boyagoda calls the «two - track» nature of Richard's writing about religion and politics hitched a ride on the zeitgeist.
Bishop Paul wrote a blog on Politics Home which read: «As a nation we had agreed they deserved to be fully welcomed; but our systems often left them bereft and destitute.
On the Square today, Peter J. Leithart looks at Jesus» politics, and Peter Sprigg writes on marriagOn the Square today, Peter J. Leithart looks at Jesus» politics, and Peter Sprigg writes on marriagon marriage.
«The assumption that Jewish life could be built on a largely secular lifestyle in which liberal politics would provide a substitute for faith,» he wrote, «was as foolish as the notion that it could persist on identification with the Yiddish language or certain ethnic foods.
He cultivated friendships with the few conservatives on Berkeley's faculty, wrote outspoken editorials for an off - campus newspaper, and found his calling: «I now viewed politics as a knife fight, my critics as blood enemies.
As Thomas Haskell once wrote: «If there is no such thing as truth but only a variety of incommensurable perspectives in criterionless competition with one another, then force and persuasion become indistinguishable, cutting the ground out from under any politics based on consent and representation.»
7 On the tendency of the Arianizing bishops to be more responsive to the urgency of bringing policy into line with politics and the correspondingly greater constitutional conservatism of the Nicene bishops, I have written in «Christology and Church - State Relations in the Fourth Century,» Church History XX (1951), Nos. 3 and 4.
Tammi has been writing about food culture, ethics and politics since 2006 at her blog TammiJonas: Food Ethics, and speaks regularly on food sovereignty at public events, on radio, and in print media.
Since you seemingly think that Wenger should focus on his job instead of having an opinion about politics in the country he lives and works in (regarding an issue which would definitely affect his work situation) I'm guessing your work is to write about politics on blogs where it doesn't belong — or would that be an incorrect assumption?
Paul Tough writes about education, parenting, poverty, and politics for various publications in the U.S.. His book How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character, was translated into 27 languages and spent more than a year on the New York Times best - seller list.
Daniel Green, a student at Cornell, asked whether I intended to write about Paul Ryan's views on food politics.
Sarah Bessey writes at www.sarahbessey.com, where she has become an accidental grassroots voice for postmodern and emerging women in the Church on issues from mothering to politics and theology to ecclesiology.
My overarching intent in writing this post was not to nitpick on calcium vs. sugar since, as I admit up front, I am not a nutritionist, nor am I particularly plugged in to the behind the scenes politics that might be influencing those professionals who advocate for flavored milk (although I appreciate Ed Bruske's writing on that issue).
He has written more than ten books on politics, history and biography.
With a three - day weekend behind us, the markets not behaving insanely (at least, not at the exact moment I'm writing) and the American electorate (unbelievably) apparently preparing to make what I think is the right choice, let's take advantage of a brief lull in consulting work (next big project's fixin'to start) to get caught up on the online politics world again.
So he has spent his time on this planet meddling with gardens, writing questionable poetry and, it's now clear, getting far too involved in politics.
Washington Post online politics reporter Jose Antonio Vargas wrote over the weekend on the Obama campaign's use of niche social networking sites for voter outreach:
Shortly after the event, I wrote up Jessica Vanden Berg's take on how the campaign spread the Macaca story, but the participants covered a lot of topics of value to anyone doing online politics.
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