#MorningMonarchy: January 11, 2018
Losing my religion, SecureDrop suicide and punching Harvey + this day in history w/the "Shining City Upon a Hill" and our song of the day by Typhoon on your Morning Monarchy for January 11, 2018.
Losing my religion, SecureDrop suicide and punching Harvey + this day in history w/the "Shining City Upon a Hill" and our song of the day by Typhoon on your Morning Monarchy for January 11, 2018.
This week on #GoodNewsNextWeek: Young Americans in record numbers are leaving their desk jobs for farm lands; California might decriminalize magic mushrooms; and Detroit is building community by building local internet.
This week on #GoodNewsNextWeek: Young Americans in record numbers are leaving their desk jobs for farm lands; California might decriminalize magic mushrooms; and Detroit is building community by building local internet.
Agent Manson, botched raids and illegal orders + this day in history w/the indictment of Phil Spector and our song of the day by METZ on your Morning Monarchy for November 20, 2017.
21st Century sellouts, erasing Spacey and the vinyl countdown + this day in history w/the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald and our song of the day by B•R•A•U•N on your Morning Monarchy for November 10, 2017.
Love ingredients, pest resistance and biblical breweries + this day in history w/the AIDS quilt and our song of the day by Tristen & Jenny Lewis on your Morning Monarchy for October 11, 2017.
“Detroit” is a new movie that reminds Americans that the issues of racism and police brutality are nothing new, blights on the nation that have never been properly addressed, as James DiEugenio describes. By James DiEugenio The new film Detroit…Read more →
What happens in Haiti doesn’t stay in Haiti. Sooner or later, it comes to places like Michigan’s Benton Harbor and Flint. Our destinies are linked. Zbigniew Brzezinski, a Polish aristocrat who long puppeteered United States presidents from behind the curtains, has written: “America is too democratic at home to be autocratic abroad. This limits the use of America’s power, especially its capacity for military intimidation.” I concur.
What happens when a scientist at CERN asks musicians to make an album about the Large Hadron Collider? You get a pulsating piece of psychedelic concept rock called "Patterns Of Light" by long-running Michigan band, His Name Is Alive.