Second Inaugural Special: George Washington and Thomas Jefferson

Published: PolicyMic (January 9, 2013)

George Washington (March 4, 1793) and Thomas Jefferson (March 4, 1805):

This article is an installment in an eleven-part series on the inaugurations of incumbent presidents who were elected to additional terms in office, culminating in an on-the-ground report of Obama’s second inauguration.

Washington:

George Washington’s second inauguration marked several firsts.

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Barack Obama’s Legacy: Part Two – After the Supreme Court’s Health Care Reform Ruling

Published: PolicyMic (June 28, 2012)

Two months ago, in my editorial detailing the positive legacy President Obama will leave behind at the end of his first term, I deliberately avoided mentioning his health care reform bill, given that it was at that time “on the Supreme Court chopping block.” Now that it has been officially deemed constitutional, I think it is important to note the two-fold impact it will have on Obama’s historical reputation:

1.... Read Original Article

Barack Obama’s Legacy: Part One – Comparison to John Kennedy

Published: The Morning Call (April 30, 2012)PolicyMic (April 30, 2012)CNN (April 30, 2012)

With one of Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievements on the Supreme Court chopping block and his re-election bid against Mitt Romney shaping up into a close race, many conservative pundits are claiming the president’s legacy is in peril.... Read Original Article

Defending My March 8th Editorial

Editor’s Note: The author is responding to Michael Suede’s article here. Suede responded to the author’s original article.

This is my response to PolicyMic pundit Michael Suede’s editorial “America’s Founders Were Pro-Big Government, But Only Because it Suited Their Interests.” I respond to each passage in its own right, with the different sections indicated by quotes and ellipses.

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Civil Rights History in High School Education

Published: The Express Times (October 3, 2011)

Can you identify the source of this quote?

“We conclude that in the field of public education separate but equal has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.”

If you can’t, don’t worry. Not even today’s high school students are expected to know that it came from the Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling in Brown v.... Read Original Article