UPDATED: 7/30/2014: Republicans care about poor people! Yes, they do, and to prove it, Paul Ryan (R-WI) is proposing a poverty plan. His plan comes just in time for the 2014 election campaign, and maybe also in time to feature in a 2016 presidential bid. Unlike FDR’s New Deal or LBJ’s War on Poverty, however, this is a plan that will make more people poorer. Paul Ryan loves poor people so much that he wants more of them! Continue reading
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Back doors for poor people
Have you heard about New York’s new “poor doors?” Seems that in return for tax and zoning breaks for giant luxury apartment complexes, the city required that developers provide some affordable housing units in the buildings. So the developers designed the building with a back door to be used by tenants of the affordable units. Continue reading
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25 years of counting kids: Income, race and inequality
Some 25 years ago, the Annie E. Casey Foundation began an annual, in-depth report on the well-being of children in the United States. The 2014 report shows our accomplishments — and our shameful failures. The area of education shows both. Continue reading
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How many journalists does it take?
How many journalists does it take to change a light bulb?
“We just report the facts, we don’t change them.”
I don’t believe that for a minute. Continue reading
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No break for taxi drivers: New deal helps companies, not cabbies

Photo of pink mustache car by Quinn Dombrowski, photo of taxi by Jeffrey Zeldman, both Creative Commons license.
The Minneapolis city council’s new regulations for Lyft, Uber, and the city’s cab companies offer legalization for the transnational, multimillion-dollar Uber and Lyft “Transportation Network Companies,” some breaks to the city’s taxi companies, and next to nothing for hard-working taxi drivers. Continue reading
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Why I love Vox
Links are the best thing the internet has given journalism. They lead back to the original quote, the book, the article, the report, the statute, the data. Like footnotes in academic writing, links keep the writer honest. (Except when they don’t — like students with footnotes, some journalists do misrepresent what linked sources say.) Continue reading
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Rejecting Central American refugees — 1980s to 2014
During the 1980s, hundreds of thousands of Central American refugees arrived in the United States. Like the child refugees fleeing Central America in 2014, they were met with hostility, rejection and deportation. Though entitled to protection under international law, the Central American refugees of the 1980s and the child refugees today do not receive that protection in fact. Continue reading
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Start with high expectations and honest grading
Dave introduced himself to my college writing class: he had a new baby, a full-time job and plenty of confidence. Rose asked for patience: she couldn’t afford the textbook and her student financial aid wouldn’t arrive for a couple of weeks. She was also living in a homeless shelter. Ann arrived with cheerful enthusiasm and what she told me was a sixth grade reading level. Louis was working full-time and needed to get a degree to continue to be employable in the field he had worked in for decades. Henry was still wearing an ankle bracelet as a condition of parole, and had excellent writing skills, but huge challenges in family situation and housing. Bonita was returning to college after 22 years, urged on by her now-college-graduate children.
I’ve changed the names to protect their privacy, but the stories are real. Continue reading
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Getting rid of the crackpots, BBC goes beyond balance
The BBC just told top managers to stop inviting crackpots to give “the other side” of the climate change debate. The Telegraph reported that the BBC Trust firmly rejected an “‘over-rigid application of editorial guidelines on impartiality’ which sought to give the ‘other side’ of the argument, even if that viewpoint was widely dismissed.” Continue reading
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Five things AP didn’t tell you about young immigrants
The plight of tens of thousands of children coming from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala is a political football, with slogans substituting for understanding. On July 9, AP published Young immigrants or refugees: 5 things you need to know — but their list omitted crucial information. Here’s essential information you need to know, but wouldn’t find in the AP article. Continue reading
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