Sara Robinson

Sara Robinson
Hometown: Vancouver, DC
Interests: The Big Con
Honors: 4

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  • Commented Donna writes of "choice" -- in a discussion on The bottomless well of evil (Blog entry) | October 15, 2008 - 5:20pm
  • October 15, 2008 - 4:07pm

    Our fellow Americans, at long last, are getting it. Not only is the Age of Reagan over; it's becoming increasingly clear that the entire post-WWII order has come to the end of its run. The world as we have known it is passing away; and with it, so does our ability to put much faith in the future.

  • Commented The forgetting is soooo convenient in a discussion on Pro-Life Politics at Work (Blog entry) | October 11, 2008 - 4:25pm
  • Published Postcard from Wasilla (Blog entry)
    October 4, 2008 - 3:39pm

    Jonathan Raban, writing in the London Review of Books, gives us a keen insight into what happens when you let conservatives build cities:

  • Published Firing Back on the CRA Libel (Blog entry)
    September 30, 2008 - 8:12pm

    Firing-Back-final.gifConservatives are twisting the facts beyond the breaking point to support their revisionist history about a law that encourages lending in low-income communities. But don’t be fooled: the financial crisis was caused by conservative financial follies and bankers run amok and nothing more. Here's how you can fire back at 11 basic myths about the Community Reinvestment Act and the role of government regulation in this Wall Street mess.

  • September 25, 2008 - 2:34pm

    We cannot word it too strongly now. Free-market economics is one of history's great failures—like monarchy and slavery and torture were failures. Countries that embrace it have invariably degraded themselves, and forfeited their own hopes for peace, democracy, and prosperity.

  • Commented Small city politics strikes again in a discussion on New York Times Makes Up Fairy Tale About Politics of Abortion (UPDATED) (Blog entry) | September 19, 2008 - 10:18am
  • Commented Project much? in a discussion on We shall overcome. Some day. (Blog entry) | September 16, 2008 - 11:22pm
  • Commented oh my god in a discussion on Weekend Watchdog Wrap-Up (Blog entry) | September 15, 2008 - 12:33am
  • September 12, 2008 - 1:59am
    Firing-Back-final.gifIn the seven years since the U.S. was hit by a terrorist attack, a few of the myths promulgated in those first few years have hardened firmly into a new conventional wisdom—some so stubbornly that you often won't even find progressives questioning them any more. The time has come to call out a few of these persistent myths that are still being taken as fact and start firing back on them.

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  • October 15, 2008 - 4:07pm

    Our fellow Americans, at long last, are getting it. Not only is the Age of Reagan over; it's becoming increasingly clear that the entire post-WWII order has come to the end of its run. The world as we have known it is passing away; and with it, so does our ability to put much faith in the future.

  • Published Postcard from Wasilla (Blog entry)
    October 4, 2008 - 3:39pm

    Jonathan Raban, writing in the London Review of Books, gives us a keen insight into what happens when you let conservatives build cities:

  • Published Firing Back on the CRA Libel (Blog entry)
    September 30, 2008 - 8:12pm

    Firing-Back-final.gifConservatives are twisting the facts beyond the breaking point to support their revisionist history about a law that encourages lending in low-income communities. But don’t be fooled: the financial crisis was caused by conservative financial follies and bankers run amok and nothing more. Here's how you can fire back at 11 basic myths about the Community Reinvestment Act and the role of government regulation in this Wall Street mess.

  • September 25, 2008 - 2:34pm

    We cannot word it too strongly now. Free-market economics is one of history's great failures—like monarchy and slavery and torture were failures. Countries that embrace it have invariably degraded themselves, and forfeited their own hopes for peace, democracy, and prosperity.

  • September 12, 2008 - 1:59am
    Firing-Back-final.gifIn the seven years since the U.S. was hit by a terrorist attack, a few of the myths promulgated in those first few years have hardened firmly into a new conventional wisdom—some so stubbornly that you often won't even find progressives questioning them any more. The time has come to call out a few of these persistent myths that are still being taken as fact and start firing back on them.
  • September 4, 2008 - 1:46pm

    In the current issue of The Nation (which also featured a cover story co-authored by our own Bob Borosage), Chris Bowers pointed out a structural truth that lies at the heart of both American political parties. In the Age of Reagan, it came to pass that the GOP consolidated itself as the party of people who are white and Christian.

  • September 2, 2008 - 2:04pm

    What we're seeing in Minneapolis (and did not see in Denver) is incitement to riot on a grand scale—planned and executed by law enforcement agencies themselves. There's plenty of evidence that the orders are coming from the federal level—and a credible suggestion that local law enforcement has been promised some sweet favors if they deliver.

  • August 26, 2008 - 5:56pm

    This was the Campaign for America's Future's Big Afternoon at the Big Tent. CAF took over the Digg Stage (the entire upstairs floor of The Big Tent) for a series of four panels addressing some of the Big Questions we wrestle with here.

  • August 20, 2008 - 8:42pm

    Conservative governments have resolutely cut budgets and driven out the experts whose job it was to keep the country's public works in good working order. But they never expected there would be an Obama Moment—a moment of national renewal in which progressives would be able to seize the process and launch some bold, creative acts of our own. It's not an overstatement to say that we may never have a creative opportunity like this one again.

  • Published Why We Don't Shoot Back (Blog entry)
    August 5, 2008 - 6:44pm

    Progressives have been picking at the whys and wherefores of liberal presidential candidates being brought down by withering attacks from the right ever since Adlai Stevenson lost to Eisenhower. But there's one fairly simple and glaring factor that I'm increasingly convinced plays at least some role in this—the different cultural roots of conservatism and liberalism. Seen this way, some solutions become obvious.

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