Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Little Green Footballs (LGF) is an American political blog run by web designer Charles Foster Johnson. In its beginning years, the site had a right-wing orientation and was known for its advocacy of the War on Terrorism and the Iraq War, as well its strident criticism of political Islam. The blog moved away from the right around 2009 and has ...
Mondoweiss is a news website [4] [5] that began as a general-interest blog written by Philip Weiss on The New York Observer website. It subsequently developed into a broader collaborative venture after fellow journalist Adam Horowitz joined it as co-editor. [6]
Regina Holliday's Medical Advocacy Blog Regina Holliday (née Regina McCanless) is a Grantsville, Maryland , resident, art teacher, artist, muralist, patient rights arts advocate, founder of the Walking Gallery and the Medical Advocacy Mural Project.
She immigrated to the U.S. in 1985. She publishes the LGBTI advocacy blog O-Blog-Dee-O-Blog-Da (Life goes on...). She is the executive director of the African Human Rights Coalition (African HRC). She was appointed a community grand marshal for San Francisco Pride 2014, in recognition of her global human rights advocacy work for LGBTI people. [2]
OpEdNews is a United States–based progressive/liberal news, antiwar activism, and opinion website founded by Rob Kall in 2003. [2] [3]It is a hybrid news, community blog and article aggregation site that publishes opinion-based articles, news stories, and diaries while its mission, according to the site, is to "... provide a content management, social networking website that supports ...
The Advocacy Project sends a number of graduate students to partner organizations in other countries that are based from the local populations. [1] The students, called Peace Fellows by the project, write blogs which chronicle their journeys as they spend time assisting local non-governmental organizations (NGOs). [2]
These policy centers are mainly blogs which post articles regarding their topic area. [14] The most extensive of these is the CCJR, who advocate for conservative criminal justice reform through advising governmental officials, media advocacy, and testifying as expert witnesses at governmental hearings.
They wrote articles in two online blogs: "ballastexistenz" and "Cussin' and Discussin'". [ 8 ] Baggs said they named their first blog "ballastexistenz" to show that people like them were capable of living a worthy life, since it was a historical term, " Ballastexistenzen [ de ] ", used to describe disabled people as incapable.