I have been tracking political cartoons in the Sentinel to observe left vs. right tendencies. Of 26 recent cartoons with a clear position one way or the other, 20 were anti-Trump and six were critical ...
The letter by James Arbour complaining about the balance in the political cartoons misses the point. The cartoons don’t have to say nice things or mean things equally because the two sides are not ...
To the editor -- YH-R, thank you for FINALLY changing the focus of your political cartoons to something other than red hat-wearing fat white guys and including our elderly current president. With all ...
I start my day every morning reading the Vail Daily online while sipping coffee. In his October 2, 2024 editorial, Nate Peterson, the editor, writes: “So why run local and national columns on our ...
It seems the “Trump sowing seeds of discontent” cartoon hit a nerve for some and caused some uncomfortable self-reflection. The Sentinel welcomes your letters to the editor. Letters should be short, ...
To the Editor: I am writing because I was a little surprised by the political cartoon in the November 2/3 edition of the Union Leader. The “Trick or Treat” scene portrayed two children dressed as ...
With all due respect to the Review-Journal’s Michael Ramirez and his considerable talent, I must disagree with his Tuesday editorial cartoon “Taking stock.” The cartoon implies that holding stock and ...
The 1619 Project attempts to teach about the abuses of slavery. To equate it with clowns, as Michael Ramirez did in his Monday editorial cartoon, is horrifying. When will it become clear that most ...
To the editor — You guys are beyond the pale. Your one-sided political cartoons and editorials are so telling. My father subscribes, but if not, at 89 years of age we would gladly drop you. He waits ...
At left, buildings and roads are flooded in Garrett, Ky., on Thursday, July 28, 2022. The same area is shown before the flooding from Google Earth at right. Ryan C. Hermens, left, Google Earth, right ...
There is nothing funny about the political cartoon in the July 7 Reading Eagle. It depicts a dart board, the implication being that scientists and public health authorities have chosen mask-wearing ...
He calls for the first graphic. “Job one: a White House we can be proud of.” It shows an addition of four floors above the main section with a penthouse. The cartoon is dated Sept. 18, 1987. To quote ...
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