AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Dec 04 2023
News
Ex-U.S. ambassador spied for Cuba for 40 years, bragged he ‘strengthened the Revolution’: feds
The former U.S. ambassador accused of spying for the Cuban government spent 40 years as a spook and claimed his work was “more than a grand slam.” Victor Manuel Rocha, 73, was formally charged Monday in Miami federal court. Rocha was arrested on Friday, more than 20 years after his tenure as U.S. ambassador to Bolivia. The FBI finally caught Rocha by having one of its agents pose a contact
New York Daily NewsJun 18 2020
Opinion
The Revolution Comforts the Comfortable
The class war in our country isn’t a matter of the poor vs. the rich; it’s a matter of business class vs. first class, E-Class vs. S-Class. Where the Left goes, squalor follows.
The scene in militia-occupied Seattle is entirely familiar, the same kind of theatrical filth that has been a part of American counterculture from Woodstock through Occupy Wall Street. These are the idiot
National Review (News)Aug 22 2023
News
Offshore wind project Revolution Wind gets federal approval
The Department of the Interior’s decision is one of the last hurdles before the 65-turbine project can become a reality. Revolution Wind, a joint venture of Danish developer Ørsted and the Massachusetts utility Eversource, would be in federal waters more than 15 miles south of Rhode Island and 12 miles southwest of Martha’s Vineyard, the companies say. It would bring its power via an undersea
The Boston GlobeMay 31 2023
News
The Revolution rally to secure a 3-3 tie at Atlanta United
Midfielder Carles Gil scored his second goal of the game in stoppage time to salvage a 3-3 draw against Atlanta United on Wednesday night at Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Ga. The Revolution (7-3-5) gave up three unanswered goals in the second half and fell behind 3-2 in the 87th minute. Gil’s brace provided a needed point in the second match of three games in eight days. The Revolution
Boston HeraldMar 15 2021
Opinion
What the woke revolution is — and isn't
The Great Awokening is gathering speed.
Hardly a week — and sometimes barely a day or an hour — goes by without a fresh incident of "cancel culture" or another "woke" scandal breaking in the news.
Whether you think the trend a good thing, a bad thing, or a trivial thing, you know exactly what I mean. To list just a few of the stories from recent weeks: Longtime New York Times
The Week - OpinionFeb 02 2021
Opinion
Localizing the green energy revolution
As President Biden continues to roll out executive orders prioritizing climate change, it is increasingly clear that there will be a relatively rapid U.S. shift toward renewable energy from the sun, wind and other sources.
Indeed, many states are already pushing ahead with ambitious renewable and clean energy policies. These policies will reduce air pollution, spur extensive economic
The HillApr 09 2013
Opinion
Margaret Thatcher's revolution
By breaking the pillars of British society, she opened the way for a politically powerful middle class.
Washington PostJun 18 2020
Opinion
How Cultural Revolutions Die - or Not
Unlike coups or political revolutions, cultural revolutions don't just change governments or leaders. Instead, they try to redefine entire societies. Their leaders call them "holistic" and "systematic."
Cultural revolutionaries attack the very referents of our daily lives. The Jacobins' so-called Reign of Terror during the French Revolution slaughtered Christian clergy, renamed months
Victor HansonJun 10 2020
Analysis
Welcome to America’s Cultural Revolution
Even in the opinion section, only approved thought is permitted.
We’re in the dawn of a high-tech, bloodless Cultural Revolution; one that relies on intimidation, public shaming, and economic ruin to dictate what words and ideas are permissible in the public square.
“Words are violence” has always been an illiberal notion meant to stifle speech and open discourse. Popularized by
David HarsanyiSep 17 2019
News
Will Hawaii lead the renewable revolution?
David Bissell’s Toyota Tundra crunches to a stop in the reddish dirt and gravel road as the first heads appear in the grass. A few sheep come into view, but, startled by the trucks, they skitter away through the unruly vegetation surrounding a network of solar panels. After a few moments, they calm and return to work, munching away on the island’s ever-present guinea grass.
Christian Science Monitor