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...dangerous, Europeans know they will not often find more natural partners than the Americans. Even as politicians disagree over how to handle Iraq and carbon emissions, French scientists find their labs are being funded along more entrepreneurial American lines, the British newspaper the Guardian has a huge U.S. readership for its website, and in Angela Merkel, Germany has elected a Chancellor determined to improve relations with the U.S. Since George W. Bush came to office, polls have shown that Europeans blame him personally more than the U.S. in general for what ails U.S.-European ties. The Transatlantic Trends survey conducted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Drifting Apart | 10/1/2006 | See Source »

...couple of years, to 2003 and '04, when the growth of partisan liberal online activism was spurred by a strain of antiwar, anti-Bush fervor and frustration with congressional Democrats for not standing up to the President. Blogs like Daily Kos and MyDD grew rapidly. Today their combined readership (more than a million people weekly) dwarfs that of the dead-tree versions of established purveyors of liberal thought like the New Republic, which has a print circulation of about 62,000. The conservative Rightroots movement is only just getting started...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Netroots Hit Their Limits | 9/24/2006 | See Source »

...coarse estimate of the Netroots' numbers shows them to be something less than a groundswell. The readership of the largest liberal blogs and the membership of MoveOn suggest that the Netroots could total 6 million people, and that assumes blog audiences don't overlap, which they do. That's only a small fraction of even the Democrats in the U.S., who number more than 70 million. While 5 million people can elect the Governor of California, the Netroots are dispersed all over the country. Even in Connecticut, one of the most liberal states, Ned Lamont, Lieberman's primary nemesis, couldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Netroots Hit Their Limits | 9/24/2006 | See Source »

...amazingly high for the 22 years that I've been doing orthopedics. So when, in the middle of doing an arthroscopic rotator cuff repair this morning, my trusty assistant Dave told me about Don Rumsfeld's repair, I knew I had to get the plain truth out to our readership - as soon as possible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rotator Cuffs: the Next Big Thing | 9/14/2006 | See Source »

...news. The Standard "gives you far more lengthy and in-depth comment than you will get from most free newspapers," says Auckland. "And it caters to a slightly older audience because of that." The migration of younger readers toward free sheets could help concentrate the Standard's mature readership, Goodman agrees, and two distinctly divided readerships could be an attractive proposition for advertisers. Regardless of its ripple effects, free newspapers are definitely here to stay. Take City A.M. Targeted within London's financial districts, the free morning business daily's circulation has risen more than 20% over the past...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Where Free's a Crowd | 9/3/2006 | See Source »

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