So who won?

As the results of Tuesday’s Congressional election came in, it was clear: the Republicans had gained control of the House of Representatives, while the Democrats had lost seats but kept control of the Senate. Representative John Boehner, a Republican from Ohio, expected to be named House Majority Leader, cried tears of joy. Senator Harry Reid, the Democrat from Nevada, said … >>

Life is like baseball: 20 idioms to know

You can’t get any more American than this: a sport that was long considered our “national pastime” and whose yearly championship — played only between US teams — is rather pretentiously called the World Series. Although baseball had its heyday from 1900 to about 1950, it’s still popular: 19 million people watched last year’s championship between the New York Yankees … >>

Two countries, two systems

Two countries. Two governments. Both unpopular. And one of them will have a test to meet in less than two weeks’ time. On Tuesday, November 2, Americans will elect all 435 members of the House of Representatives and one third of the 100-member Senate. It is widely believed that the Democrats will lose some or all of the substantial majority … >>

Washington Post says “Don’t be a wise guy”

As we give up more and more of our privacy online, it’s inevitable that our employers will become more and more interested in our private lives. But should they be able to control what we say? This question came up a week ago, when The Washington Post suspended one of its sports columnists, Mike Wise, for something he’d written on … >>

The Twenty Years’ War is (almost) over

Victory was in the air, and it seemed the appropriate thing to do. George W. Bush, perhaps nostalgic for the service he’d abandoned in 1971, wore a military pilot’s uniform as he stepped out of a fighter plane onto the deck of an aircraft carrier. The ship was full of troops returning to California after they’d defeated the Iraqi army … >>