Open Mic
Open Mic May 10
46“Is our children learning?” We received confirmation this week of exactly what some of them are learning.
Three women, missing for a decade, were found alive and relatively healthy (at least physically) in a house in Cleveland, Ohio. Charles Ramsey, a man with his own checkered past, got tagged as a hero for rescuing them, though it appears he played more of a bit part than did Angel Cordero. Ramsey, however, made a far better impact in television interviews and has become an Internet phenomenon…probably for some of the wrong reasons. Ariel Castro, who is suspected of kidnapping the women and holding them hostage, reportedly left a suicide note containing a detailed confession.
Meanwhile, House Republicans continued to blow smoke and declare that it proves there’s fire.
And today is Friday, which means you have the floor. Maybe you could sweep it…I see a lot of debris around.
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We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.

Open Mic May 3
79
This shouldn’t be the story. The fact that this was a story should be the story.
Today’s Open Mic carries a single story of the week. Last weekend, Wilcox County High School in Georgia held its first racially integrated prom. Nearly a half-century after the passage of the Civil Rights Act. Sure, all of those segregated proms were legal, simply because the school refused to hold one since the Act was passed…and left it to “private entities” to hold “private parties” that just happened to look exactly like high school proms. There are so many metastories here. Why is this dog-bites-man story a story? Is it because the dog finally bit back, after a half-century of the man biting the dog? Is that why we didn’t see anything in the press about the 2012 “private parties”, which were merely segregated proms? What was wrong with the 2012 class’s students? Or 2011’s? Or 2010’s? We had a biracial President, but biracial students couldn’t attend the “white private party”…in 2012!
In related news, in Birmingham, Alabama, A. H. Parker High School’s class of 1963 held its prom this week. Only 50 years late. You see, the prom was canceled in 1963 after students protested segregation. And the students are still waiting for their graduation ceremony.
Of course, it’s Friday, so you get to decide what to discuss. But this is at least food for thought.
Don’t see an article on a particular topic, but want to talk about it somewhere? This is Open Mic. Talk about whatever you want, but stay respectful.
We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.

Open Mic April 26
29The surviving Boston Marathon bombing suspect was read his Miranda rights while the Outrage Machine blamed the Bill of Rights. How could we have known that the framers meant what they said? His silence may have been a shrewd move by an international criminal mastermind, or it might have been that he suffered multiple throat wounds. We report, you decide. Investigators and the massive media have now turned to his mother, father and sister-in-law for answers.
They thought they knew who overcooked the ricin, but the case just got weirder when the Federales released their suspect: a search of his house revealed no weapons of mass destruction. Suspicion now falls on his rival.
Just east of America’s Ricin Bowl, we learn that not all tree-huggers are in blue states.
Senator Baucus decided no longer to caucus — with the Democrats. He’s sitting out the 2014 election.
Don’t see an article on a particular topic, but want to talk about it somewhere? This is Open Mic. Talk about whatever you want, but stay respectful.
We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.

Open Mic April 19
29
Sonic Boom: the explosion at the fertilizer plant in West, Texas.
The week started off with a disaster in Boston, as someone exploded a pair of bombs at the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Wednesday night, there was a disaster in Texas as a fertilizer plant exploded, killing at least fifteen people. The Senate had its own disaster, as a minority of Senators filibustered a bill with provisions supported by nine out of ten Americans. Harry Reid promised to come back to it — the fight is not over. Disasters were averted when two letters containing the deadly poison ricin were discovered, one addressed to a Senator, he other to the President. A suspect is in custody. Another suspect is in custody — a married couple, actually — in a disaster that happened, the murder of a pair of Texas prosecutors (and the wife of one of them). The disaster that was America’s response to the September 11 attacks had more light shed upon it, as a bipartisan commission concluded that the Bush Administration tortured many of the people it illegally detained. In what might be an interesting twist on the origin of the word “disaster” — a “bad star” — NASA announced discovery of two or three planets that might harbor life, thus perhaps orbiting good stars.
But we don’t have to talk about disasters. It’s Friday, and that means the floor is yours. What do you want to discuss?
Don’t see an article on a particular topic, but want to talk about it somewhere? This is Open Mic. Talk about whatever you want, but stay respectful.
We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.

Open Mic April 12
102It’s now been a year since the arrest of George Zimmerman, the guy accused of killing Trayvon Martin. The U.S. Senate, with a bipartisan 68–31 vote, defeated an attempt to filibuster a new gun control bill. Immigration reform continues to move forward, with 64 percent of Americans wanting it to include a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. President Obama presented his proposed 2014 budget; Speaker Boehner had harsh words to say about it, though he liked the parts about Social Security. He even stepped away from a colleague’s criticism. Meanwhile, Kim Jong Un continues to flaunt his nuttiness.
It’s Friday, and that means the floor is yours. What do you want to discuss?
Don’t see an article on a particular topic, but want to talk about it somewhere? This is Open Mic. Talk about whatever you want, but stay respectful.
We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.

Open Mic April 5
89
Gene Siskel (left) and Roger Ebert, along with their famous thumbs.
President Obama went on tour this week to sell his proposal for increased firearm regulations. Recent job growth has reportedly been faster in large companies than in small ones, a change from the historical norm. North Korea continued its saber-rattling this week. We lost a legend At the Movies; critics gave it two thumbs down. And speaking of such dark matters, a particle hunter attached to the International Space Station may have found the building blocks of dark matter.
Don’t see an article on a particular topic, but want to talk about it somewhere? This is Open Mic. Talk about whatever you want, but stay respectful.
We create a new Open Mic every week to give a clean slate, but feel free to add to this topic at any time.








