2012 Won't Be the Same without Herman Cain
The Institute's deadline poet bids farewell to the former GOP front-runner's entertaining presidential bid.
Karen Dolan is a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies and director of the Cities for Progress and Cities for Peace projects based there. She holds an M.A. With Highest Distinction in Philosophy and Social Policy from the American University in Washington D.C. Karen joined IPS in 1996; Karen’s public scholarship and activism at IPS have included organizing the Cities for Peace movement and the Cities for Progress project. These link community-led organizations with policymakers at the local, state, and federal levels. The focus of her work is on local democracy/empowerment, peace and economic equality.
Some of Karen’s publications include: Our Communities are Not for Sale; Paying the Price: the Mounting Costs of War in Iraq, Unleash Democracy in Mandate for Change, and Foreign Policy Goes Local. She also appears in print and broadcast media. Karen serves on the boards of: The Liberty Tree Foundation, The Backbone Campaign, and the Jobs With Justice Worker Rights Board. She sits on several steering committees including the Bring the Guard Home Now and the D.C. Human Rights City project.
The Institute's deadline poet bids farewell to the former GOP front-runner's entertaining presidential bid.
There's nothing in Montgomery County's local, non-binding peace resolution about firing Lockheed's employees or tossing any corporations into the Potomac River.
The tea party and its ilk offer us only cold cups of bitter tea while serving up fountains of champagne to the super-rich, Wall Street, and big corporations.
It could spell trouble for Social Security.
One in seven Americans--a record high of 43.6 million people--was poor last year.
GOP hysteria throws goodness, and American families, under the bus.
As a nation, we're in the emergency room in desperate need for someone to stop the bleeding.
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