There are more web clocks
There are more web clocks than you could ever count. (Here’s the official US time.) But this is a one of the more clever clocks I’ve seen.
Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one. - A.J. Liebling
{ Daily Archives }
There are more web clocks than you could ever count. (Here’s the official US time.) But this is a one of the more clever clocks I’ve seen.
I very much buy Mickey Kaus’s Fifty-Fifty theory, that modern polling (plus the end of history), mean that the two political parties in the US will remain in “tie” for the foreseeable future:
The “Fifty-Fifty Forever” theory suggests a possible near-future that’s both exciting and depressing — exciting because close races are exciting; depressing because close races, as we learned in 2000, tend to end in so much acrimony, litigation, and uncertainty that they undermine democratic legitimacy.
That’s exactly why I think two of the most critical and opportune political issues are both non-partisan: improving election machines (so tight races can be decided fairly and accurately), and independent redistricting (so that incumbents are not gerrymanded into forever-safe districts).