A young cousin called last summer to tell me what the manager of a gay bar told him. The bar manager didn't hire blacks behind the bar, according to young cousin, because blacks steal.
The Detroit automakers, hoping for billions in federal aid, announced they plan to outsource all the bad ideas they have put into place over the last 40 years to a company in India. Executives at the U.S. companies said the move could save the automakers tens of billions of dollars while
The CEOs of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler are trying some public-relations moves. They're saying that if Congress bails them out with billions, they will only take a dollar a year in salary. It's part of the "we all have to make sacrifices" approach. I guess they think it makes up for the fact that they made millions last year while their companies were going in the toilet and many of their employees lost their jobs.
With Thanksgiving now past and the last of the turkey leftovers eaten, we move a step closer to Christmas. Advent began on Sunday, and so did the waiting.
Many residents began their holiday shopping on Black Friday arriving at shops even before the sun rose. This crack-of-dawn consumerism has become a tradition (albeit a peculiar one) with individuals perhaps wanting to work off a little of the weight they believe they gained on Thanksgiving.
According to the proverb, “A man is known by the company he keeps.”
Well, if that old saw really does hold true, I’m in some pretty tall cotton because I have significant similarities with some pretty famous people, all born in December and/or 1936.
All but the most ardent Clinton supporters would agree the Clintons attract attention, much of it self-generated. As one pundit pointed out earlier this week, one will never known whether Hillary is truly thinking of the president or thinking of her political aspirations.
Black Friday doesn't tell us much. We won't know the full scope of the financial crisis until we start opening our gifts. If we find Ho-ho-OH-NO!s, we can rest easy. We're not headed for another Great Depression. No one facing the choice between food and shelter would spend money on a Ho-ho-OH-NO!
With CW's “Beauty and the Geek” currently putting out a call for new nerds, you might be wondering if you’d be eligible. That’s where this simple quiz comes in — to find out, get your Ticonderoga No.2 pencil ready, and … begin!
What Obama unveiled in announcing his economic advisers was a “dream team” of superstar economic and market thinkers that America and the rest of the world have been waiting nearly two months to see assembled to confront the economic crisis.
Earlier this year I debated The New York Times’ worst story of the decade. John McCain’s non-affair affaire? The Boy Scouts “alienating so many Americans”? My pick: “The Bride Wore Very Little,” urging brides to seem “more vamp than virgin.” Revision now seems requisite, given the Times’ latest example of why liberal is a dirty word: columnist Charles M. Blow, urging Republicans to spurn values issues that once made it a majority.
Some hear the call of God to help the helpless. Some hear the cry of the orphan and are moved to action. Many organizations try to help, but with more than 130 million orphans across the globe, the problem is bigger than any organization can solve.
Black Friday? More like Bleak Friday. Doesn't have to be that way. Doesn't have to be a frantic free-for-all. Doesn't have to be a miserable mob scene.
All I wanted to do was buy a new set of tires for my pickup truck. Thanks to the crisis in credit and the death spiral of Detroit, it will now take an act of Congress to bail out the automotive industry’s Big Three before I get any new rubber to hit the road.
With Thanksgiving over, I suppose I can go with the flow and be just like everyone else. Yep, time to turn on the Christmas music, watch a few themed movies and really get crackin' on finishing my shopping.
Today, I give thanks for the most American gift of all, the bailout. No other country is so generous in rewarding failure. Taxpayers should be grateful to have earned that distinction.