Read two, no make that three interesting articles in The Atlantic Monthy - which is basically a more conservative or moderate version of The New Yorker - it has articles, short stories, etc - but from a different slant. Yet not as conservative as The National Review.
Quite interesting mag actually - doesn't rant, reports evenly, not as much editorializing and looks at both sides of the issue. I'm like my Dad - I like to look at all the angles.
The articles are: ( The Agenda: A War to Start All Wars - How the Middle East looks like Europe circa World War I by Niall Ferguson )
Mosied on to another one - this about the fiscal health of the nation. Unlike the New Yorker, the Atlantic Monthly has lots of short but pithy articles. ( The Rancor Divident - The new Democratic Congress just might help the White House mend the country's broken fiscal policy )
( Smoking bans across time starting in 1624 and ending in 1945 )
Fourth up? ( Closing the God Gap: How a pair of Democratic strategists are helping candidates talk about their faith. )
Oh, and I've figured out a way to chapters of literary works emailed to me for free. Go to: dailylit.com - I'm doing "Little Women by Louisa May Alcott" and "Dream Psychology" by Sigmund Frued. You can also do Ulysess by James Joyce but having read Ulysses (book version) I don't recommend it. Joyce requires more attention than an email.
Quite interesting mag actually - doesn't rant, reports evenly, not as much editorializing and looks at both sides of the issue. I'm like my Dad - I like to look at all the angles.
The articles are: ( The Agenda: A War to Start All Wars - How the Middle East looks like Europe circa World War I by Niall Ferguson )
Mosied on to another one - this about the fiscal health of the nation. Unlike the New Yorker, the Atlantic Monthly has lots of short but pithy articles. ( The Rancor Divident - The new Democratic Congress just might help the White House mend the country's broken fiscal policy )
( Smoking bans across time starting in 1624 and ending in 1945 )
Fourth up? ( Closing the God Gap: How a pair of Democratic strategists are helping candidates talk about their faith. )
Oh, and I've figured out a way to chapters of literary works emailed to me for free. Go to: dailylit.com - I'm doing "Little Women by Louisa May Alcott" and "Dream Psychology" by Sigmund Frued. You can also do Ulysess by James Joyce but having read Ulysses (book version) I don't recommend it. Joyce requires more attention than an email.