Los Angeles Times

One Man's Rumor Is Another Man's Reality

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
September 28, 2009 |

Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that someone's not after you. Over the last few months, a lot of writers have dusted off Richard Hofstadter's classic 1964 essay on the paranoid style in American politics just so they can explain away the loony rumors and conspiracy theories coming from the far right. But no amount of intellectual condescension is going to make those powerful untruths go away.

Obama's Shunning Response to the Racism Debate

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
September 21, 2009 |

Barack Obama had no choice but to disagree with Jimmy Carter. Carter called some of Obama's most hysterical critics racist. But our first nonwhite president once again tried hard not to be sucked into a racial uproar. As much as he and his liberal allies like to declare that Americans need to hash out racial issues publicly, the subject of race can only damage his presidency.

Walt Whitman's Answer to Joe Wilson

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
September 14, 2009 |

Go ahead, hit me with all the Tipper Gore jokes you want, but I'm beginning to think that U.S. political news, like rap music, needs a parental warning notification.

Every few years or so, we have a collective paroxysm over the bad behavior of this or that group of public figures. We fret over what the antics of sports stars or celebrities teach our children. Whether they're taking illegal steroids or partying without their knickers, we hope and pray that the kids won't mimic them.

Obama Tries to Coax the Middle Class into Saving for College | Los Angeles Times

September 12, 2009
The New America Foundation, a public policy institute, said the task force should have gone further, recommending matching grants for families below certain ...

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Conservatives, Yesterday and Today

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
August 31, 2009 |

Think back to the spring of 1968. The U.S. is mired in Vietnam. The country is in turmoil. The sitting Democratic president abruptly pulls out of his campaign for reelection, and the leading conservative columnist of the day neither gloats nor does a victory dance.

It's nearly impossible to imagine this happening today.

Sen. Kennedy's Personal Touch

  • By
  • Michael Dannenberg,
  • New America Foundation
August 28, 2009 |

Soon after my former roommate was killed in Iraq, Sen. Ted Kennedy called me. It was a Sunday afternoon, and I wasn't pleased to get the call. I was on the senator's staff at the time, and he sometimes called on weekends with policy questions, usually about education funding. The calls usually required some quick fact-checking at the least, and sometimes a trip into the office.

Democracy in Action and the Obnoxious

  • By
  • Gregory Rodriguez,
  • New America Foundation
August 17, 2009 |
Don't get too outraged, those of you who are looking down your noses at those unreasonable, misinformed anti-healthcare-reform town hallers. No matter what particular clan, tribe or party you belong to, you can't really disown them any more than you can your own grandmother. You may not agree with them, but their brand of hotheaded, self-righteous, obnoxious, stick-it-to-the-manism is as American as apple pie.

Grand Junction a Microcosm of Efficient Healthcare | Los Angeles Times

August 13, 2009
"It's a great example for the nation," said Len Nichols, a healthcare economist at the centrist New America Foundation in Washington, DC, who co-wrote a ...

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Mexico Might Not Have the U.S. to Kick Around Anymore

  • By
  • Andrés Martinez,
  • New America Foundation
August 12, 2009 |

The United States hasn't prevailed in Mexico City since Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee fought alongside each other to vanquish Santa Ana, but the American soccer team will try again today as it takes on the Mexican national team in a key World Cup qualifying match in Azteca Stadium. Despite how fiercely competitive the U.S.-Mexico soccer rivalry has become in the last two decades, the Americans have never won in Mexico City.

National Consumer Protection Agency Would Upend Fragmented Structure | Los Angeles Times

August 9, 2009
Seidman, now a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, said she created an award for the best bank examiner on consumer affairs and compliance issues ...

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