Thursday 30 June 2016

Opinions P.M.: Who will spark the delegate revolt?

Sponsored by American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network | Pity poor Britannia. God save America.; Partisanship and tribalism are ruining our conversations about art; Britain may end up choosing door #3; Benghazi is over. But the search for proof of Clinton’s perfidy continues.; One more mistake the elites made; Sasse speaks truth to power; Sketchpad: Congress is getting frantic about the Zika thing; Arrogance, recklessness and scorn for ideas — no, not Trump. George W. Bush; How our thinking on markets has evolved; Eleanor Roosevelt and Fiorello La Guardia battling over how to protect Americans; Reverence and respect for our sacred lands: the national parks; Brexit’s loudest voices, just like Trump, have no answers; Washington Post bestsellers: July 3, 2016; How did our politics get so harsh and divisive? Blame 1968.;
 
Opinions P.M.
 
 
Robert F. Bukaty / AP
Pity poor Britannia. God save America.
You can't vote Britain out of Europe any more than you can vote Minnesota into Tuscany.
Partisanship and tribalism are ruining our conversations about art
The tendency to judge art on its politics is leading us to embrace or reject movies before they even make it to theaters.
 
Britain may end up choosing door #3
Or is that one locked?
 
Benghazi is over. But the search for proof of Clinton’s perfidy continues.
They just can't understand why everyone doesn't see things their way.
 
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One more mistake the elites made
Visible enough now.
 
Sasse speaks truth to power
What makes a country 'great'?
 
Sketchpad: Congress is getting frantic about the Zika thing
Up in arms, really.
 
Arrogance, recklessness and scorn for ideas — no, not Trump. George W. Bush
Jean Edward Smith takes the measure of Bush and finds the nation was ill-served.
 
 
Who will spark the delegate revolt?
Trump establishment denies rebellion underway.
 
How our thinking on markets has evolved
Ray Fisman and Tim Sullivan study how our changing views on markets change our lives
 
Eleanor Roosevelt and Fiorello La Guardia battling over how to protect Americans
Matthew Dallek explores early rivalries and reasoning behind the Office of Civilian Defense
 
Reverence and respect for our sacred lands: the national parks
Terry Tempest Williams finds much to appreciate in America's natural environment
 
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Brexit’s loudest voices, just like Trump, have no answers
The joke is on the "Leave" voters.
 
Washington Post bestsellers: July 3, 2016
Washington Post bestsellers: Anne Tyler's 'Vinegar Girl,' retelling of Shakespeare's 'Taming of the Shrew,' debuts at No. 3
How did our politics get so harsh and divisive? Blame 1968.
Review of "American Maelstrom: The 1968 Election and the Politics of Division" by Michael A. Cohen
 
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