Articles 2025
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					Latest Sterling Outrage Victim? KidneysBloomberg View, April 30, 2014 Donald Sterling’s racist comments have now cost researchers precious funding in the fight against a racially biased disease.  
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					Why Toyota Moved to TexasBloomberg View, April 29, 2014 Contrary to the image promulgated by both critics and boosters, Texas is not an alien planet populated by barbarians with big hair.  
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					Are You a Woman? Dove Thinks You're StupidBloomberg View, April 24, 2014 The Dove Campaign for Real Beauty has finally overreached.  
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					How Much Free Speech Will Your Child Have at College?Bloomberg View, April 22, 2014 Four important questions to ask on those campus tours.  
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					Paul Krugman, Brand AmbassadorBloomberg View, April 16, 2014 CUNY isn’t paying for Krugman's Nobel-winning research on trade theory any more than J'Adore hired Charlize Theron because of her Oscar-winning turn as a serial killer in "Monster." They’re buying his image and the attention he brings.  
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					Crowdfunding Is Not a Scam, It's Market ResearchBloomberg View, March 28, 2014 The most successful crowdfunding projects aren’t charities. They’re ventures that produce something people wish they could buy. That makes crowdfunding a great way to test the market.  
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					Michelangelo's David Has a Right to Bear ArmsBloomberg View, March 17, 2014 Michelangelo’s giant was meant as an inspiration to locals and a warning to would-be invaders. He wasn’t an underwear model. He was a Minuteman. Putting a gun in his hand may look weird, but it’s a lot truer to his original meaning than a souvenir apron.  
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					'Average' Barbie Is Just as FakeBloomberg View, March 10, 2014 As a mass-produced product, a doll represents a single version of female proportions. Taken as a role model, any single standard excludes those with a different build. Celebrating “average” doesn’t solve the problem.  
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					Cutting-Edge Feminists of Latter-Day SaintsBloomberg View, March 06, 2014 Thanks to the First Amendment, the least regulated market in America is the market for religion. It’s also one of the most competitive. To attract and retain members, religious groups are constantly adapting and innovating, in sometimes surprising ways. No one in 1970 would have imagined that by the turn of the century, evangelical Protestants would be worshipping to rock music in mega-churches. A long New York Times article this weekend profiled another such adaptation: a change in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints’s policies toward young women going on two-year Mormon missions. After the church lowered the age requirement for women from 21 to 19 in October 2012, the number of female missionaries about tripled, to 23,000.  
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					Oscar Likes the Older WomenBloomberg View, February 28, 2014 So much for the theory that Hollywood has no place for women who’ve outgrown ingenue roles: At 39, Amy Adams is the youngest of this year’s Academy Award nominees for best actress. It’s the oldest slate in history, with an average age of 55 and a median of 49.