It\u2019s the day after Thanksgiving: You\u2019ve got leftover white meat, cranberry chutney and sweet-potato souffl\u00e9. We\u2019ve got the blogging equivalent: stories that were pretty and tasty, but didn\u2019t get the attention they deserved. So, in honor of the day after, we\u2019re unwrapping a smorgasbord of posts that shoulda been gobbled up in the past year, but weren\u2019t. Don\u2019t worry: We\u2019ve checked them for mold and freezer burn, and they\u2019re still good.<\/p>\n
U-Cubed<\/a><\/p>\n Our leftover turkey buffet begins with an oxymoron: U-Cubed, a union for unemployed and underemployed people. Through UCubed, members can connect with others who are unemployed in their area, provide services and support for each other, and spearhead legislative action in DC on critical jobs issues.<\/p>\n A strong and quiet Democrat<\/a><\/p>\n As we watch the unending parade of political clowns bumbling their way toward power, it\u2019s easy to forget that there were once politicians who weren\u2019t flashy, didn\u2019t mouth off, knew their stuff, and got the job done. Senator Mike Mansfield was one of them.<\/p>\n Poligraft: News in, money links out<\/a><\/p>\n A website whose name is a clever amalgamation of two words that, unfortunately, often go together\u2014politics and graft\u2014connects the dots between politicians in the news and the donors who influence their votes. The news is not that politicians are corrupted by campaign donations; the news is that we can now input a link to a story about a politician and immediately see why they\u2019re voting the way they\u2019re voting.<\/p>\n