3 Very Bizarre Attempts At Pro-Nuclear Power Propaganda
What do a Japanese character named Nuclear Boy, a pro-nuclear propaganda film from 1952 and Smithers from The Simpsons all have in common?
What do a Japanese character named Nuclear Boy, a pro-nuclear propaganda film from 1952 and Smithers from The Simpsons all have in common?
Why were all of the quotes in a New York Times on an 11-year-old girl who was gang-raped in Cleveland, Texas, focused almost exclusively on the male rapists, and not the young girl?
A leaked document from Prime Minister Koizumi’s cabinet reveals a shocking fact: The Japanese government already knew that nuclear power plants couldn’t withstand a 7.1 magnitude earthquake, let alone 9.0.
Remember when everyone was served an equal portion of the pie? Not anymore.
John F. Kennedy Jr.’s short, powerful speech before the UN General Assembly in 1961 still rings true today.
Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-NY) recently uncovered some shocking news: Click and Clack, those damn Car Talk guys with their Boston accents and their informative solutions on how to fix cars, are in fact causing the budget crisis.
We were hoping someone would write a nice Rachel Maddow love song one of these days—but we never in our wildest dreams imagined it’d be anything like this. Check it out:
The guy who asked teacher Taylor Mali, “What do you make?” at a dinner party certainly never thought he’d get this answer.
According to the ladies of Second City Chicago, people who oppose basic funding for women’s health care will be left with one option.
How can Republicans bring the Black community’s abortion rates into their pro-life arguments? By equating abortion with slavery, of course.