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| - | a 锟斤拷race hustler锟斤拷 to 锟斤拷dishonest,锟斤拷 Rev. Al Sharpton responded Tuesday to Fox News host Bill O8217Reilly recent insults.Representing what O8217Reilly called 锟斤拷the grievance industry锟斤拷 on his Monday program, Sharpton laid out other 锟斤拷grievances锟斤拷 in the history of America, noting that the First Amendment literally
| + | s uniques doubled to 40 million last month, while CNBC's Q3 daytime viewership rose 26 percentIHT finds publishers like Financial Times' parent Pearson (NYSE: PSO) continuing to emphasize reducing its reliance on advertisers, as it has for the past year. So far, its plan seems to be working: less than one-third of FT Group's revenues now come from ad dollars. More after the jump.-- Turning to subs, partners: Some of Pearson's action |
| - | nt Obama8217s speech on the economy. He8217s looking to refocus the country8217s attention on the economy at a time when it8217s showing improvement. And the president has two goals: First, he wants to take some credit for the improving economy, and second, to demonstrate that he8217s actually shaping events and no
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| - | s voice to the chorus of voices urging Congress to reject a resolution to use military force in Syria.The ad, called 锟斤拷Never Again,锟斤拷 directly links the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with the current situation in Syria and calls for Americans to tell their representatives to vote 锟斤拷no锟斤拷 on military action.锟斤拷We never
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| - | Wall in Jerusalem as a prop in an attack ad. Instead let8217s focus on this claim: 锟斤拷Barack Obama has never visited Israel as president.锟斤拷 Un most Romney attack ads, this one happens to be based on an accurate detail: Obama visited Israel as a candidate, but not during his first term. It8217s a fact that8217s appa
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Current revision as of 12:37, 19 September 2014
s uniques doubled to 40 million last month, while CNBC's Q3 daytime viewership rose 26 percentIHT finds publishers like Financial Times' parent Pearson (NYSE: PSO) continuing to emphasize reducing its reliance on advertisers, as it has for the past year. So far, its plan seems to be working: less than one-third of FT Group's revenues now come from ad dollars. More after the jump.-- Turning to subs, partners: Some of Pearson's action