Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2011

- Budget Cuts, Over Easy
At Denny's, the Tea Party holds its own debt-commission hearing.
David Weigel | politics |
Wednesday,
6:06 PM ET - Leading Bystander
The claims that Obama doesn't lead are wrong and muddle things.
John Dickerson | politics |
Wednesday,
5:19 PM ET - Amazon Opens Fire
The new Kindle is a tablet for the masses.
Will Oremus | technology |
Wednesday,
5:04 PM ET
Fear the Cantaloupe
Are foodborne illness outbreaks on the rise?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Wednesday,
4:32 PM ET- NFL 2011
I want revenge on DirecTV.
Ta-Nehisi Coates, Tommy Craggs, and Josh Levin | sports nut |
Wednesday,
2:53 PM ET - Stop Obsessing Over Entitlement Reform
Why Jeff Madrick will argue against the proposition "Grandma's benefits imperil Junior's future" at the Oct. 4 Slate/Intelligence Squared U.S. debate.
Elizabeth Weingarten | intelligence squared |
Wednesday,
11:41 AM ET - The Culture Gabfest, "Bunny Emergency" Edition
Listen to Slate's show about the new TV dramas Pan Am and The Playboy Club, the breakup of R.E.M., and the robots who are coming for your job.
Farhad Manjoo, Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, and Julia Turner | culture gabfest |
Wednesday,
11:06 AM ET - Will Robots Steal Your Job?
We wrote a computer program that replicates Jason Kottke. How does Robottke compare to the Web's best link blogger?
Farhad Manjoo and Chris Wilson | robot invasion |
Wednesday,
6:15 AM ET - Libertarians With Antlers
What Robert H. Frank's The Darwin Economy gets wrong about evolution.
John Whitfield | Science |
Wednesday,
6:13 AM ET
GPS Humanitarianism
Technology makes it easier to bring aid to war-torn countries—but harder to connect to people.
Bridget Guarasci | future tense |
Wednesday,
6:11 AM ET- The Christie Shuffle
The New Jersey governor ducks answering whether he's going to join the GOP race.
John Dickerson | politics |
Wednesday,
1:00 AM ET
Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2011

- Unappealing
The Supreme Court is less interested in ruling on Obama's health care law than you think.
Dahlia Lithwick | jurisprudence |
Tuesday,
6:57 PM ET
You-Boat
Can you buy your own submarine?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Tuesday,
6:26 PM ET- The Nevermind You've Never Heard
The version of Nirvana's album that Kurt Cobain loved best.
Seth Colter Walls | music box |
Tuesday,
5:56 PM ET - Christie Our Savior
Why this week's Republican messiah is no better than last week's.
David Weigel | politics |
Tuesday,
5:30 PM ET
Crazy vs. Stupid
Why do the media treat Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry differently?
Jessica Grose | doublex |
Tuesday,
5:04 PM ET- Leave Grandma Alone
An interview with former DNC Chairman Howard Dean: Why he'll argue against the proposition "Grandma's benefits imperil Junior's future" at the Oct. 4 Slate/Intelligence Squared U.S. debate.
Elizabeth Weingarten | intelligence squared |
Tuesday,
4:45 PM ET - NFL 2011
Pro football's evolution, as measured by Dan Dierdorfisms.
Ta-Nehisi Coates, Tommy Craggs, and Josh Levin | sports nut |
Tuesday,
2:53 PM ET - What It Means To Be Black in America
A new art exhibition in Washington, D.C., explores the place where racial identity and national identity intersect.
Elizabeth Weingarten | gallery |
Tuesday,
11:57 AM ET - The Joy of Unicorns
The real reason you never see the mythical one-horned beasts.
Frank Lesser | low concept |
Tuesday,
11:14 AM ET
Love, Child
Statistically speaking, marrying young can spell disaster. Not for me.
Katie Arnold-Ratliff | doublex |
Tuesday,
7:15 AM ET- One-Word Emails: Yes or No?
Farhad Manjoo and Emily Yoffe discuss the etiquette of terse emails and slangy signoffs.
Farhad Manjoo and Emily Yoffe | manners for the digital age |
Tuesday,
6:59 AM ET - Confessions of a Literary Barbarian
A defense of The Cambridge History of the American Novel.
Benjamin Reiss | culturebox |
Tuesday,
6:58 AM ET - Will Robots Steal Your Job?
Why the highest-paid doctors are the most vulnerable to automation.
Farhad Manjoo | robot invasion |
Tuesday,
6:56 AM ET - "The Lottery"
A weekly poem, read by the author.
Edward Hirsch | poem |
Tuesday,
6:54 AM ET
Monday, Sept. 26, 2011

- Hang Up and Listen: The Enigma in a Hoodie Edition
Slate's sports podcast on Michael Vick's injuries, NFL Films' Bill Belichick documentary, the Red Sox and Braves, and the Moneyball movie.
Stefan Fatsis, Josh Levin, and Tom Scocca | hang up and listen |
Monday,
7:13 PM ET - Rick Perry Has a Heart
The Republican base believes in states' rights except when states do things it doesn't like.
David Weigel | politics |
Monday,
5:53 PM ET - Terra Nova
Humans get a second chance on Earth, but they can't escape Dawson's Creek.
Troy Patterson | television |
Monday,
4:41 PM ET
Knocked Up and Knocked Down
Why America's widening fertility class divide is a problem.
Sharon Lerner | doublex |
Monday,
4:14 PM ET
King of the Road
Why is King Abdullah willing to let Saudi women vote but not drive cars?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Monday,
4:10 PM ET- Life or the Party
Dear Prudence offers advice on a woman self-destructing with sex, drugs, and alcohol—in a live chat at Washingtonpost.com.
Emily Yoffe | dear prudence |
Monday,
3:38 PM ET - NFL 2011
Did Buffalo outsmart Bill Belichick?
Ta-Nehisi Coates, Tommy Craggs, and Josh Levin | sports nut |
Monday,
2:53 PM ET - Could Mitch Have Made It?
Mitch Daniels considers the doom of his presidential campaign.
John Dickerson | politics |
Monday,
2:18 PM ET - Dear Prudence: Fallen for My Ex's Sister
A weekly Dear Prudence video.
slate v |
Monday,
12:58 PM ET - The Submission: The Slate Audio Book Club
Our critics on Amy Waldman's timely 9/11 book.
Emily Bazelon, Kishwar Rizvi, and Hanna Rosin | the audio book club |
Monday,
12:25 PM ET - Pakistan Is the Enemy
We know that Pakistan's intelligence service is aiding terrorists. What are we going to do about it?
Christopher Hitchens | fighting words |
Monday,
11:33 AM ET - Occupation Obfuscation
Israel's new tactics to delay Palestinian statehood and blame the Palestinians.
William Saletan | frame game |
Monday,
8:46 AM ET - Will Robots Steal Your Job?
My father the pharmacist vs. a gigantic pill-packing machine.
Farhad Manjoo | robot invasion |
Monday,
4:21 AM ET - Will Robots Steal Your Job?
You're highly educated. You make a lot of money. You should still be afraid.
Farhad Manjoo | robot invasion |
Monday,
4:20 AM ET
How To Learn the Language of Evil
Alan Wolfe's Political Evil offers lessons liberals especially need.
Michael Ignatieff | books |
Monday,
4:19 AM ET
Sunday, Sept. 25, 2011

Saturday, Sept. 24, 2011

Friday, Sept. 23, 2011

Falsified Medical Records and Shady Dealings at Countrywide
This week's top MuckReads from ProPublica.
Braden Goyette | propublica |
Friday,
5:27 PM ET- Friend, Foe, or Pakistan?
The nation's role in Afghanistan is getting more and more baffling as the war goes on.
Fred Kaplan | war stories |
Friday,
5:00 PM ET - Grandma's Benefits Imperil Junior's Future
How you can watch—and participate in—the live Slate/Intelligence Squared debate Oct. 4 at NYU.
intelligence squared |
Friday,
3:46 PM ET - They're Still Aliiiiiive!
Cameron Crowe's cloyingly sweet Pearl Jam documentary.
Dana Stevens | movies |
Friday,
3:44 PM ET - Narrative Over Numbers
It has been a long time since Americans have been this depressed about the economy.
Robert J. Shiller | project syndicate |
Friday,
1:18 PM ET - The Rwanda Experiment
Can the African nation have peace and prosperity without freedom?
Anne Applebaum | foreigners |
Friday,
1:05 PM ET
Does Public Nudity Spread Disease?
Not especially.
Michael Thomsen | explainer |
Friday,
12:48 PM ET- I Wish I Were Like the Postman!
A gallery of old advertisements reveals how we once idolized the men of the USPS and couldn't remember to use those newfangled ZIP codes.
Elizabeth Weingarten | gallery |
Friday,
11:47 AM ET - The Fending Off Total Disaster Gabfest
Listen to Slate's show about Obama's debt plan, a new, unflattering book about the Obama White House, and the execution of Troy Davis.
Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz | gabfest |
Friday,
11:28 AM ET
The Longform.org Guide to Michael Lewis
His best magazine pieces about money and/or balls.
Max Linsky | longform |
Friday,
11:21 AM ET
Does Absence Actually Make the Heart Grow Fonder?
A new book suggests that getting away from each other for prolonged periods of time is good for the health of your marriage.
Jessica Grose | doublex |
Friday,
10:56 AM ET- The Best Line of the Night
At the GOP debate, underdog candidate Gary Johnson finally gets a moment in the spotlight—and seizes it.
David Weigel | politics |
Friday,
8:24 AM ET - Mitt Is From Mars, Perry Is From Venus
In the GOP presidential debates, Rick Perry shows he's a feeler, not a thinker.
William Saletan | frame game |
Friday,
7:28 AM ET - Pan Am
Sumptuous fluff about American dominance.
Troy Patterson | television |
Friday,
7:08 AM ET - Permanent Record
Making stuffed animals for John and Caroline Kennedy.
Paul Lukas | permanent record |
Friday,
7:08 AM ET - Why Would Anyone Go to Burning Man?
It's an alternate universe without brands or money.
Seth Stevenson | well-traveled |
Friday,
7:05 AM ET - Corrections
Slate's mistakes.
corrections |
Friday,
7:04 AM ET - Rick Rolled
The more Perry debates, the worse he gets.
John Dickerson | politics |
Friday,
2:06 AM ET
Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011

- Moneyball
A great sports movie for people who can't stand sports movies.
Dana Stevens | movies |
Thursday,
6:59 PM ET - Don't Believe Ron Suskind
His book about Obama is as spurious as the ones he wrote about Bush.
Jacob Weisberg | the big idea |
Thursday,
6:54 PM ET - Not Sharing Is Caring
Facebook's terrible plan to get us to share everything we do on the Web.
Farhad Manjoo | technology |
Thursday,
6:34 PM ET
Does My Insurance Cover Falling Satellites?
What happens when a piece of NASA equipment lands on your house.
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Thursday,
6:28 PM ET- Could Riots Happen Here?
Violent unrest has swept Europe and the Middle East. Is America next?
Sudhir Venkatesh | crime |
Thursday,
6:13 PM ET - The World's Most Traveled Man
How wanderlust turned into a competitive sport.
Ken Jennings | Science |
Thursday,
5:16 PM ET - R.E.M.'s Revolution
How a post-punk band from Georgia changed rock 'n' roll forever.
Bill Wyman | music box |
Thursday,
2:44 PM ET - The X Factor
The heir to American Idol arrives.
Troy Patterson | television |
Thursday,
2:39 PM ET
Small Dictators, Big Bots
Yahoo didn't mean to censor emails about Wall Street protests. The truth is much more insidious.
Zeynep Tufekci | future tense |
Thursday,
1:46 PM ET- Could a U.N. Upgrade Help the Palestinians Prosecute Israeli Officials?
How the fight over Palestine's U.N. membership could generate an international legal crisis.
Hussein Ibish | foreigners |
Thursday,
12:42 PM ET - That's Great, It Starts With An Earthquake ...
Watch R.E.M. fans try not to mangle the lyrics to the band's most challenging song.
slate v |
Thursday,
12:23 PM ET - Permanent Record
How the Manhattan Trade School prepared a generation of New York women for the workplace.
Paul Lukas | permanent record |
Thursday,
7:08 AM ET - Why Would Anyone Go to Burning Man?
Where else can you try a snack glory hole?
Seth Stevenson | well-traveled |
Thursday,
7:05 AM ET - The DoubleX Gabfest: Iced Champagne Edition
Listen to Slate's show about Rick Perry and the HPV vaccine, dads and testosterone, and fall TV.
Daniel Engber, Jessica Grose, and Hanna Rosin | doublex |
Thursday,
7:04 AM ET - Once a Cheater
My husband says he had a one-night stand with a co-worker—but she called it a torrid affair. Who can I believe?
Emily Yoffe | dear prudence |
Thursday,
7:03 AM ET
Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2011

- The Slow Death of Certainty
Will the Troy Davis case be the one that finally turns America against the death penalty?
Dahlia Lithwick | jurisprudence |
Wednesday,
8:30 PM ET - Fed Up
Republicans may not like it, but the law says the Federal Reserve can do whatever it wants.
David Weigel | politics |
Wednesday,
6:33 PM ET - Apparently, Men Are Finished
The fairer sex won big at Tuesday's Slate/Intelligence Squared U.S. debate.
Elizabeth Weingarten | intelligence squared |
Wednesday,
5:44 PM ET
Books By Men Who Like Big Families
Jeffrey Kluger's The Sibling Effect is part of an emerging canon that fetishizes large broods.
Lauren Sandler | doublex |
Wednesday,
5:39 PM ET
A Life Sentence on Death Row
What percentage of death sentences are actually carried out?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Wednesday,
5:34 PM ET- Revenge of the Texans
Can Rick Perry ride the cowboy myth to the White House?
Bryan Curtis | the middlebrow |
Wednesday,
4:29 PM ET - NFL 2011
What if HGH could cure Peyton Manning?
Tommy Craggs, Josh Levin, and Barry Petchesky | sports nut |
Wednesday,
2:53 PM ET - More Moneyball, Same Problems
The numbers are good, but the story is still bunk.
David Haglund | sports nut |
Wednesday,
1:01 PM ET - Stop Whining About Facebook's Redesign
So you hate the site's new look. Simmer down—you'll like it soon enough.
Farhad Manjoo | technology |
Wednesday,
12:27 PM ET - The Culture Gabfest, "Feel the Burn" Edition
Listen to Slate's show about new movie Drive, the season premiere of Two and a Half Men, and the Burning Man festival.
Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, Seth Stevenson, and Julia Turner | culture gabfest |
Wednesday,
11:06 AM ET
Dreams From the American Left
A history of leftist vision and self-sabotage.
Paul Berman | books |
Wednesday,
10:24 AM ET
Beyond Oktoberfest
There's more to German brewing than Munich's lagers. Five delicious styles from the rest of the country to sample this fall.
Mark Garrison | drink |
Wednesday,
10:04 AM ET- Alliance For Christ
Rick Perry's pledge to stand with Israel "as a Christian" is a gift to Islamic extremists.
William Saletan | frame game |
Wednesday,
8:48 AM ET - The El Cheapo Guide to Culture
An eight-step approach to entertaining yourself economically.
Matthew J.X. Malady | culturebox |
Wednesday,
7:29 AM ET - Permanent Record
A progressive school with a revolutionary idea: Train women for the workplace.
Paul Lukas | permanent record |
Wednesday,
7:08 AM ET - Why Would Anyone Go to Burning Man?
You can meet God—and his name is Larry.
Seth Stevenson | well-traveled |
Wednesday,
7:05 AM ET
Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2011

- There's Something I Need To Tell You, Sarge ...
A gallery of service members who came out the day "don't ask, don't tell" was repealed.
Katherine Goldstein | politics |
Tuesday,
6:23 PM ET - Gears of War 3
Bayoneting reptilian humanoids never felt so ... right.
Taylor Clark | technology |
Tuesday,
5:28 PM ET - Where It All Went Wrong
Ron Suskind's new book and the competing theories for Obama's collapse.
David Weigel | politics |
Tuesday,
5:26 PM ET
Edu-netics
What will Suri Cruise learn at her Scientology-influenced school?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Tuesday,
4:45 PM ET- Eyes on an Execution
The Troy Davis case shows how wrong eyewitness evidence can be.
Brandon L. Garrett | jurisprudence |
Tuesday,
3:52 PM ET - Here Be Dragons
A history of map monsters.
Ken Jennings | Science |
Tuesday,
3:19 PM ET - Cleaning Out Ives' Closet
The tricky task of preserving an artist's life and work.
Jan Swafford | music box |
Tuesday,
3:09 PM ET - Attention Must Be Paid
How the Internet is changing how people listen.
Esther Dyson | project syndicate |
Tuesday,
3:01 PM ET - NFL 2011
Feed me to the Detroit Lions!
Tommy Craggs, Josh Levin, and Barry Petchesky | sports nut |
Tuesday,
2:53 PM ET - Romney's Iowa Problem
How best to neutralize front-running Rick Perry?
slate v |
Tuesday,
2:05 PM ET - Who Is Warren Buffett's Secretary?
Debbie Bosanek is not the talkative type, especially about tax reform.
Annie Lowrey | moneybox |
Tuesday,
1:27 PM ET - Do Evites Cheapen a Wedding?
Farhad Manjoo and Emily Yoffe debate the etiquette of paper vs. electronic wedding invitations.
Farhad Manjoo and Emily Yoffe | manners for the digital age |
Tuesday,
1:27 PM ET - The Britishism Invasion
Language corruption is a two-way street.
Ben Yagoda | the good word |
Tuesday,
12:57 PM ET - It's Only Natural
Why did Apple change the way we scroll?
Michael Agger | technology |
Tuesday,
12:10 PM ET
The First Trillionaire
How long until the world's richest person is worth more than $1 trillion?
Annie Lowrey | explainer |
Tuesday,
11:23 AM ET
Will Robots Steal Your Job?
Join Slate technology columnist Farhad Manjoo at the New America Foundation for an event about machines as doctors, lawyers, and creators.
future tense |
Tuesday,
11:16 AM ET- Permanent Record
Searching for Marie Garaventa.
Paul Lukas | permanent record |
Tuesday,
7:08 AM ET - Why Would Anyone Go to Burning Man?
People are nicer—and more naked—than they are anywhere else.
Seth Stevenson | well-traveled |
Tuesday,
7:05 AM ET
Should I Make My Friend Shave Her Head?
We made a pact that she wouldn't move in with someone unless she was engaged—and she broke it.
Lucinda Rosenfeld | friend or foe |
Tuesday,
6:56 AM ET- "Goodbye Billyburg"
A weekly poem, read by the author.
Spencer Short | poem |
Tuesday,
6:50 AM ET
Monday, Sept. 19, 2011

- This Time He Really Means It
Obama has been angry before, but he's never been able to stay angry. Will his latest economic plan be any different?
John Dickerson | politics |
Monday,
8:05 PM ET - New Girl
Zooey Deschanel brings her niche sex appeal to the small screen.
Troy Patterson | television |
Monday,
7:57 PM ET - Hang Up and Listen: The Legal Sucker Punch Edition
Slate's sports podcast talks to Dave McKenna about Redskins owner Dan Snyder dropping his defamation suit.
Stefan Fatsis, Josh Levin, and Mike Pesca | hang up and listen |
Monday,
5:59 PM ET - Is Netflix As Dumb As It Seems?
The strange logic of the company's decision to divide itself in half.
Farhad Manjoo | technology |
Monday,
5:13 PM ET
What Do Bears Have To Do With Toilet Paper?
A short history of bathroom-tissue marketing. Plus: Are bears really that soft?
Daniel Engber | explainer |
Monday,
4:56 PM ET
Cough It Up, Punk!
If a criminal swallows the evidence, how do police get it out of him?
Brian Palmer | explainer |
Monday,
4:45 PM ET- He'd Like a Virgin
Dear Prudence advises a woman who lied to her fiance about her sexual past—during a live chat at Washingtonpost.com.
Emily Yoffe | dear prudence |
Monday,
3:08 PM ET - NFL 2011
The Kansas City Chiefs' sad cavalcade of torn knee ligaments.
Tommy Craggs, Josh, Levin, and Barry Petchesky | sports nut |
Monday,
2:53 PM ET - DSK's Defense
Dominique Strauss-Kahn says the New York district attorney cleared him of sexual violence. Is that true?
William Saletan | human nature |
Monday,
2:31 PM ET - In Defense of Endless War
As 9/11 showed, civilization has enemies with which peace is neither possible nor desirable.
Christopher Hitchens | fighting words |
Monday,
2:19 PM ET - Dear Prudence: Father's Worn Out Welcome
A weekly Dear Prudence video.
slate v |
Monday,
1:44 PM ET - The You Decade
There's a new narcissistic pronoun in town.
Christopher Hitchens | fighting words |
Monday,
1:06 PM ET - How To Prevent a Depression
Eight drastic policy measures necessary to prevent global economic collapse. None of them will be popular.
Nouriel Roubini | moneybox |
Monday,
12:29 PM ET - Is China More Powerful Than America?
A fascinating new book argues that the United States has already been eclipsed as the world's dominant economic power.
Simon Johnson | moneybox |
Monday,
12:23 PM ET - Why Small Businesses Aren't Innovative
Everyone says small businesses are dynamic, market-shaking, job creators. But new evidence suggests that's not true.
Annie Lowrey | small business |
Monday,
7:15 AM ET - Young, Poor, and Desperate
The poverty crisis is devastating young Americans. Here's what the president can do about it.
Eliot Spitzer | moneybox |
Monday,
7:12 AM ET - Permanent Record
A trove of report cards from the 1920s and the surprising, inspiring, sometimes shocking stories they have to tell.
Paul Lukas | permanent record |
Monday,
7:08 AM ET - Why Would Anyone Go to Burning Man?
It's just unshowered vegans, jet-setting art freaks—and me.
Seth Stevenson | well-traveled |
Monday,
7:05 AM ET
Geography Wonks for $2,500
A Jeopardy! star explores the world of map obsessives.
Seth Stevenson | books |
Monday,
6:48 AM ET
Slate's most recent blog posts:
-
Brow Beat:
posted by Forrest Wickman
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 5:42 PM ET
Obama Might Write For 8th Graders, But He Doesn’t Write Like Them
An article on the State of the Union address from the University of Minnesota’s Smart Politics blog has been making the rounds today, arguing that “for the third straight Address, the President's speech was written at an eighth-grade level.” Picking up on Smart Politics’ analysis, Politico noted that “President Obama's three addresses have the lowest grade average of any modern president,”while Fox News emphasized the theme with the headline “Obama’s SOTU Written At 8th Grade Level For Third Straight Year.” The article included a picture of a child in a dunce cap.
What does all this mean? First, it does not mean that President Obama writes like an 8th grader. While these stories repeatedly note the president’s “low scores” and “low grade levels” according to the Flesch-Kincaid test, this only means that his State of the Union speeches score high in comprehensibility. According to the test, they are easier to understand. (In fact, there’s a nearly identical test called the Flesch Reading Ease test, in which high comprehensibility correlates with high number scores, but Smart Politics chose not to use this test.)
How does the test work? Well, it’s not very complicated. The Flesch-Kincaid test only measures the average sentence length (it counts the number of words in each sentence) and the average size of each word (it counts the number of syllables in each word). It uses these numbers to approximate how easy a text is to understand. A score of 8 indicates that a text should be easy to understand for an 8th grader, a score of 6 should be easy to understand for a 6th grader, and so on. (Calculating a Flesch-Kincaid score requires a comprehension of arithmetic below the 8th grade level.)
If that wasn’t clear, let’s take an example. Wikipedia points out that the sentence “The Australian platypus is seemingly a hybrid of a mammal and reptilian creature” is a 13.1, as it has 26 syllables and 13 words. If we tighten the sentence, so that it’s “The Australian platypus seems a hybrid of a mammal and a reptile,” it scores an 8.8 (meaning that it was “written at the 8th grade level”). Which is the better sentence? The same analysis suggests that the first paragraph of The Sun Also Rises was written at the 7th grade level.
The author of the Smart Politics post, Eric Ostermeier, argues that his calculations show that the speeches of our last few presidents—Reagan, Bushes I and II, Clinton— “have been written more and more simplistically” (his emphasis), with Obama’s speeches the most “simplistic” of all. Putting aside the accuracy of the test for a moment, what it really suggests is that they’ve been written more simply. One of Strunk & White’s elementary rules of composition is to “omit needless words”; similarly, one of George Orwell’s six rules in “Politics and the English Language” is to “never use a long word where a short one will do.” (Orwell also agrees with Strunk & White that “If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out”).
If we can take anything from this test—which is pretty simplistic itself—it’s that Obama spoke pretty clearly. And if Obama is one of many recent American presidents to express himself more clearly, why is that a bad thing?
(Full disclosure: The Flesch-Kincaid test indicates that this article was written at the 10th-grade level. But I wouldn’t read too much into that.)
Read More
-
Weigel:
posted by David Weigel
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 5:36 PM ET
Newt's Moon Speech: Not Actually Crazy
Zeke Miller reports from a Gingrich appearance on Florida's space coast, where he talked about -- wait for it -- space. "When they have 13,000 Americans living on the moon," he said, "they can petition to become a state."
Read More
-
Trending News Channel:
posted by Slate Staff
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 4:43 PM ET
Navy’s SEAL Team 6 Frees Aid Workers in Somalia
How long until they start releasing action figures and major motion pictures for SEAL Team 6?
Read More
-
The XX Factor:
posted by Dana Goldstein
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 4:45 PM ET
The Research Behind Obama's State of the Union High-School Dropout Proposal
In the education section of his State of the Union address last night, President Obama floated a policy idea that left a lot of people—including some of us immersed in the school reform debate—scratching our heads. Students should be required by law to attend school either until they graduate or turn 18, Obama said, because “we … know that when students aren’t allowed to walk away from their education, more of them walk the stage to get their diploma.”
Read More
-
Future Tense:
posted by Torie Bosch
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 4:14 PM ET
Does Google Accurately Guess Your Age and Gender?
Ars Technica’s Casey Johnston has started a fun new game: find out what Google guesses is your age and gender. These “inferred demographics” are based on the websites you visit and are tracked by a Google cookie; they are used for advertising purposes. Given Google’s controversial announcement Tuesday that users will not be able to opt out of new privacy changes, learning what the company thinks about you seems particularly useful, and informative.
Read More
-
The Reckoning:
posted by Michael Moran
on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, at 1:22 PM ET
Caught Between China and America, Taiwan Plays Its Hedge
Nine days ago, Taiwan’s voters began a process that, if not mishandled or suddenly seized upon by GOP presidential contenders, could defuse one of the two ideological time bombs that could conceivably lead to an outright war between China and the United States. The U.S.-China dispute over Taiwan’s future, along with the unpredictable mess in North Korea, represent the only true sources of World War III in Asia. Any progress toward a peaceful solution to either is in everyone’s interest.
Read More
-
Moneybox:
posted by Matthew Yglesias
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 5:36 PM ET
Lunar Exploration On The Ballot In 2012
Newt Gingrich is full of wacky ideas, so Twitter is currently ablaze with snark over comments he made this afternoon suggesting that a Gingrich administration would commit to the construction of a permanent base on the moon. How quickly we forget that lunar colonization was a real Bush administration policy proposal that had money appropriated for it and everything. Among other things, Tom DeLay's district benefitted from space-related expenditures, and diverting funds to a Moon base somehow cut NASA's climate-monitoring programs. The Obama administration cancelled the program with its Fiscal Year 2011 budget request, not so long ago. In the scheme of things, for the pendulum to swing back if the GOP recaptures the White House wouldn't be all that surprising.
Read More
-
The Wright Show:
posted by Robert Wright
on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012, at 6:30 PM ET
Was the Grand Inquisitor more humane than George Bush?
Cullen Murphy’s new book on the Inquisition, God’s Jury, argues that we’re not as great as we think we are. Yes, Murphy says, the Inquisition is behind us, but more of its elements live on than we realize, and sometimes we seem less enlightened than the Inquisitors. Consider, as Murphy does here, the Bush administration’s view of torture:
Read More