Disparate Impact and Our Current Doom Loop
Essay by A.J.R. Klopp | In the 1960s Duke Power had a problem. For years it had systematically discriminated against its black employees, refusing to promote them beyond manual labor
read moreEssay by A.J.R. Klopp | In the 1960s Duke Power had a problem. For years it had systematically discriminated against its black employees, refusing to promote them beyond manual labor
read moreFiction by Detective Wolfman | It had been months since Dutch Van Zandt had a woman. And now that he did he had her every way he could. And what a woman.
read moreEssay by Triana | When one speaks of Right-leaning creatives, the 20th century novelist and essayist D.H Lawrence is not one that springs to mind
read moreEssay by Appalachian Man | Strolling with my girl through one of the once-great American metropolises, the truth glares at me from all sides: We are living in the Fall
read moreFiction by Will Collins | Elsewhere in the lagoon, far from the canals and palazzos and factories, a small oared boat deposited its passenger on a barren islet. Like the brothers, the oarsman was curious about his commission, but he stayed quiet, having been paid handsomely to deliver the foreigner to a small island without asking questions
read moreEssay by Jay K Chesterton | The most unsettling attribute that human beings share with chimps—that most people don’t like to consider to exist within themselves—is the rudimentary drive for primate dominance
read moreFiction by Arbogast | For the first time in years, the young and vigorous special agent could not stop his phlegm-covered lungs from coughing, nor could he heal his aching head. It felt worse than a cold, but not as bad as the Spanish flu, which had once put Lieutenant Midnight of the famed Yankee Division on the shelf for the entirety of January 1919
read moreEssay by Charles Haywood | In November, Donald Trump will win the election. This will happen despite the best efforts of the Regime to prevent it. True, they successfully cheated Trump of reelection in 2020, and will try again. The problem they face now, however, is that all their tools for fixing a Presidential election now offer diminishing or negative returns
read moreFiction by Jeremiah Suit | “But Daddy, since the sickness, nobody care about money no more. Bitches gettin’ jacked for they socks and hand sanitizer,” Candy said, emphatically, trying her damnedest to sound small and afraid
read moreFiction by Miles McNaughton | I yanked the seatbelt over his neck and pinned the gun to his leg. It went off, going straight through the driver’s seat. Julian yelled, going first for his ears, and then for his chest. The Mexican was throwing himself back and forth to turn around. His gun was in his hand…
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