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Arianna Huffington

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Arianna Huffington is the co-founder and editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post, a nationally syndicated columnist, and author of thirteen books. She is also co-host of “Left, Right & Center,” public radio’s popular political roundtable program, as well as “Both Sides Now,” a weekly syndicated radio show with Mary Matalin moderated by Mark Green.

In May 2005, she launched The Huffington Post, a news and blog site that has quickly become one of the most widely-read, linked to, and frequently-cited media brands on the Internet.

In 2006, she was named to the Time 100, Time Magazine's list of the world’s 100 most influential people.

Originally from Greece, she moved to England when she was 16 and graduated from Cambridge University with an M.A. in economics. At 21, she became president of the famed debating society, the Cambridge Union.

www.huffingtonpost.com

OpEd News Member for 693 week(s) and 1 day(s)

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SHARE More Sharing        Friday, October 25, 2013
A More Perfect Union: Being Gay in America In the preamble of the Constitution, we are told that we are constantly moving toward a more perfect union. And while people in every age think they're living in a time of transition, ours truly is an age of transition when it comes to the rights of gay Americans. It's in the zeitgeist -- in the courts, in pop culture, in the business world and in people's voices online and offline.
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(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, July 11, 2013
"Signature Strikes" and the President's Empty Rhetoric on Drones By the time Obama accepted his Nobel Peace Prize 11 months into his presidency, he'd already ordered more drone strikes than George W. Bush had in his entire presidency. By the end of 2012, he'd ordered six times as many strikes in Pakistan as Bush had. Missiles from drones might be exploding in Pakistan and Afghanistan and Yemen, but the fallout will impact us here at home for years to come.
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(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, March 7, 2013
10 Years Later: Looking Back on the Iraq War So We Can Clearly Look Forward The consequences of this disastrous war are still very much with us. In the seemingly endless manufactured crisis over the "fiscal cliff" and the sequester, it's amazing how much airtime and print space have been devoted to the deficit with the word "Iraq" barely getting a mention. Clearly a triumph of forgetting.
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(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Neocon Nightmare: The Truth Behind the Attacks on Chuck Hagel This nomination, even though Hagel is a Republican, shouldn't be looked at as another attempt by President Obama to curry favor with the opposition. It's the best kind of decision -- one made not to placate some interest group, but, rather, in the interest of the country.
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SHARE More Sharing        Monday, December 31, 2012
So Long, 2012: New Year's Resolutions I'd Like to Hear Through the years, I've discovered something about New Year's resolutions: while it's not so easy to keep them, it's very easy to make them for other people. And a lot more fun, too. So here are some New Year's resolutions I'd like to hear assorted public figures make and keep...
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(7 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, December 13, 2012
"Slightly Above Zero": A Slogan for Our Age of Diminished Expectations Wherever you look, there are ominous signs that threaten to take our struggling economy over a much bigger cliff than the one looming on December 31st. And yet none of our political leaders seem to even be looking beyond the cliff, let alone planning for what happens next. No one is talking about a plan for real growth. Our entire conversation stops at the cliff's edge. But, unfortunately, our problems won't.
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(4 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Friday, August 10, 2012
Half a Billion Dollars and All We Got Is This Lousy Election? Even before the London games have ended, the political press corps has already turned its attention to its favorite sport: the VP speculation marathon. Will it be T-Paw? Will it be Portman? Will Romney risk taking a risk? Can the GOP afford to put two white men on the ticket? How will his pick affect the electoral college? How about the popular vote? What does Intrade say?
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(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Iraq and Iran: A Partnership Made in America When a witness with a long history of being wrong takes the stand, a skilled cross-examiner will introduce those errors to cast doubt on whether that witness' judgment should be trusted now. We should do the same in the court of public opinion. Those who fomented war with Iraq must not be allowed to do it again with Iran without being held accountable.
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(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Friday, May 25, 2012
JPMorgan, the Volcker Rule, and the Extreme Brevity of Financial Memory It's clear the solution to the destructive effects of the financial euphoria-driven boom and bust cycle will not be found in Washington. The banks will always win on that front -- they own the lobbyists, and the lobbyists have a stranglehold on the legislative process. When piecemeal rules are written, the banks will hide behind complexity and loopholes.
SHARE More Sharing        Saturday, April 7, 2012
Time to Take Afghanistan Off the Campaign 2012 Back Burner Surely we can all agree that the first rule of military action should be: do no harm to your own national security. But right now we are doing a lot of harm, losing hearts and minds every day and making our country ultimately less safe as a result.
(1 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Campaign 2012: The Disconnect Widens Unfortunately, as the unreal reality show finishes up in New Hampshire and heads down to South Carolina, the disconnect widens, the cynicism grows, and the resignation spreads.
SHARE More Sharing        Friday, January 6, 2012
HuffPost's Latest e-Book: OCCUPY: Why It Started. Who's Behind It. What's Next In 2011, with the credibility of our political system in tatters, something happened. People said "enough," and decided to take matters into their own hands. Time captured the moment by making the protester person of the year for 2011.
(5 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, December 27, 2011
2011: The Year the Power Went Off in Washington According to a Pew Research Center poll released this month, dissatisfaction with Washington incumbents is at a record high, with 67 percent of registered voters saying that "most members of Congress" should lose their jobs. A Gallup poll from earlier in the month put the number of those who think most members of Congress don't deserve to be re-elected at an astounding 76 percent.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Mitt Romney Brazenly Lies and the Media Lets Him Slide Mitt Romney's brazenly dishonest ad is far from the garden-variety truth stretching we're used to in political campaigns. It is so breathtakingly cynical it should cause us to question whether a candidate that would put it forth is fit for any public office -- let alone the presidency. Along with being deceitful, the ad is also a challenge to the media.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Pepper-Spraying Occupy: An Assault on Our Democracy The Occupy movement has been a test -- a national MRI -- that has allowed us to check-in on the health of our democracy by allowing us to see what's going on underneath the surface of America's power structures. And the results are dire. What the movement, and the response to it, has shown is a government almost completely disconnected from those it purports to represent.
(3 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Thursday, November 3, 2011
Shakespeare, The Bible, And America's Shift Into A Punitive Society The growing punitive tone of our national debate is not only inhumane, it undermines what needs to be done to turn around the economy for the sake of everyone -- including the 1 percent. As we head into the thick of the 2012 race, let's be mindful of the chasm between truly trying to make things better and just trying to be caught trying.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Tuesday, July 26, 2011
The Debt Ceiling Impasse: The Myth of Grand Bargains and Win-Win Unicorns After the champagne has been uncorked and lots of backs have been slapped in DC, the lives of regular Americans will not be better -- indeed, they will almost certainly be worse. President Obama likes to say, as he did during his Twitter forum in early July, that "everything is on the table." But that was never true, because jobs and growth never even made it close to the table.
SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, July 20, 2011
From DSK to BSkyB: Media Takeaways From the Latest Round of Scandals Now that the revelations and resignations are coming faster and reaching higher, there's a distinct end-of-empire feel to things. Britain has the dubious distinction not only of being the country most associated with loss of empire, but of managing to keep losing it over and over again in new and ever more inventive ways.
(2 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Postcard From Greece: This Should Not Be About Austerity, It's About The Future Of Democracy Can a truly democratic movement break the stranglehold of corrupt elites and powerful anti-democratic institutional forces that have come to characterize not just the politics of Greece, but most Western democracies, including our own? Greece is only an extreme example of an unfolding seismic social shift that is challenging democracies the world over.
(6 comments) SHARE More Sharing        Friday, June 17, 2011
The Internet Grows Up: Goodbye Messy Adolescence The Internet of the future, the mature, grown-up Internet, has the potential to take what's best about the human experience -- our passion, our knowledge, our desire to connect -- and channel it into an online experience that truly resonates with how people live.

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