April 17, 2007 -
        
  
        After the horrifying killings at Virginia Tech yesterday, this morning I flicked around the radio dial to see what the professional talkers had to say on the matter.
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 16, 2007 -
        
  
        Anyone who's followed the reaction to the Duke lacrosse rape case in the blogosphere knows that it's occasionally brought out the worst in human nature: racism, misogyny, classism, and a general viciousness, all aided and abetted by people's ability to speak their piece without revealing their identity.	
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 16, 2007 -
        
  
        The 2006 mid-term elections wrapped over five months ago, but to paraphrase Monty Python, the saga of Florida's 13th Congressional District ain't dead yet.	
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 13, 2007 -
        
  
        Yesterday we asked whether Durham District Attorney Mike Nifong exploited a mentally unstable unstable woman for political gain in the Duke lacrosse rape case, citing the accuser's history of psychological issues.	
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 12, 2007 -
        
  
        Sordid revelations of prosecutorial misconduct just keep coming in the Duke lacrosse rape debacle.	
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 12, 2007 -
        
  
        Is South Carolina shaping up to be the new-age-hipster Mecca of the South?	
  
      
     
   
  
  
    
        
          
              
            
            
            
        April 11, 2007 -
        
  
        The company's ads boast, "Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there."Æ		But apparently the nation's largest insurer didn't want engineers who were actually neighbors of Hurricane Katrina victims to inspect storm-damaged properties, arguing that they were "too emotionally involved."