Word: doubtedly
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...other students in the film have inspired goals, such as earning a college scholarship or leaving Warsaw to pursue artistic interests, Jake’s only goal in life is meeting a girl. After seeing the way Jake treats himself and his friends, there’s no doubt as to why he’s eternally single. Jake never develops as a character and never moves beyond his infuriating inferiority complex. The highlight of his portion of the film comes when he gets drunk with his brother, a sequence that is funny but lacks any dramatic punch. This...
...Young and the Restless,” à la Mary J. Blige? Well, not in this album, anyway. Then again, the kind of writing and music that Slug and Ant produce makes you seriously wonder whether they’ve ever watched a daytime drama. I doubt they would even get the cultural reference should they listen to Blige’s “No More Drama.” For a glimpse of what’s going on in their heads, listen to “The Waitress,” which describes the daily routine...
What's going on? No doubt some of the violence can be blamed on the general chaos that has gripped Somalia in the 17 years since it last had a functioning government, the dictatorship of Mohamed Siad Barre. But there are also fears that recent fighting, and especially the latest in Mogadishu, are signs that Somalia is entering its bleakest chapter...
Given how much the changing climate, rising fuel prices, and declining food supplies have been in the news lately, you’ve no doubt heard some arguments against the use of corn-derived ethanol as an energy source...
...Instead of maintaining the clause that abortion should remain rare, and thus placing a cloud of moral doubt over the procedure, pro-choice Americans should view abortion as morally acceptable. This is the only way to maintain consistency between the morality and legality of abortion. Abraham Lincoln made this same argument when he responded to Stephen Douglas in their famous debates. Douglas supported federal neutrality on the slavery issue, while claiming to be personally ambivalent on whether slavery was right or wrong, which Lincoln called an untenable moral position. Lincoln argued that it was only reasonable for the federal government...