- What you missed on Sunday Kos …
- Celebrate Women's Equality Day by voting—and winning—on Nov. 6, by Sher Watts Spooner
- Five things to keep repeating if we want a better economy for everyone, by David Akadjian
- This historic moment, by Laurence Lewis
- Why are we being lied to about the power situation in Puerto Rico, by Denise Oliver Velez
- My son leaves for college today, by Mark E Andersen
- BET founder and black capitalist Robert L. Johnson proves a point about race and class, by Egberto Willies
- Hey, progressive white people, it is time to talk about our own racism, by Susan Grigsby
- Data shows Democrats must call out Republican politicians’ race-baiting to win voters of all races, by Ian Reifowitz
She told the DailyMailTV that McCain lived in the DC “bubble” and was out of touch with real people and as a result, overreliant on his advisors to tell him “what America really wanted.” She went on to say: [...]
I think that’s unfortunate because he had some strange people around him and..disloyal people, and you know, I don’t say that as like hate speech or griping about it, it’s just a fact they were just some not nice people.
Pittsburgh will hold the distinction of being the largest city in the U.S. without a daily print newspaper after the city's Post-Gazette informed readers it will cut its production schedule from seven days a week to five beginning this weekend.
The Post-Gazette, which launched 232 years ago and is one of the oldest newspapers in the country, had originally indicated in June the cutback would eventually be happening while noting the digital edition of the paper will continue.
On today’s Kagro in the Morning show: Greg Dworkin rounds up a complicated weekend. Once again under the cloud of a mass shooting. Trump makes McCain's death about him (which would've been fine). DNC superdelegate reforms. Why Cohen & Manafort thought they'd get away with it.