|
|
Super PACs haven't led to billionaires secretly buying democracy, they've led to billionaires publicly buying it. (02:58)
Newt Gingrich gains a powerful supporter, America gets a new look at its founding fathers, and Bjork performs a song. (00:33)
The Tennessee Tea Party demands that textbooks remove references to the Founding Fathers' slave ownership and violence against Native Americans. (04:27)
Stephen Colbert defines "we, the people" and compares himself to Martin Luther King Jr. during the South Cain-olina Primary Rally at the College of Charleston. (09:33)
The Tennessee Tea Party says goodbye to Barney Frank with a derogatory tweet. (03:38)
Stephen sheds some light on Congressional representatives -- those shy, elusive creatures with brief, two-year terms. (03:43)
Stephen chronicles presidential business from Barack Obama killing Bin Laden to Abe Lincoln's half a theater review. (03:12)
New York City's mayor, Michael Bloomberg, orders the evacuation of Zuccotti Park, citing potential health and safety risks. (03:40)
Sarah Palin bows out of the race the way our founding fathers intended: by having talk show host Mark Levin read a press release on his show. (04:12)
Web searches are enshrined in America's founding documents, and cigarettes have a First Amendment right to be alive with pleasure. (04:54)
Free birth control will wipe out the American race and instantly turn daughters into wanton harlots with insatiable sexual appetites. (04:42)
To safeguard against voter fraud and ensure that only the "right people" get elected, Republicans pass laws requiring voters to show government-issued photo IDs. (06:33)
Sean Parnell supports Colbert Super PAC's plan to buy an elephant, but Sheila Krumholz wants to shine a light on the taint of private money. (06:27)
In an attack against the shabby, cash-only roadside shacks that make America great, Texas cancels Fourth of July fireworks shows. (04:26)
When it comes to health care, America should listen to the man who made his fortune selling bacon cheeseburger pizza. (03:34)
Ed Rendell explains that America is wussing out by not doing anything about China and canceling football games because of weather. (06:04)
American Apparel is on the brink of bankruptcy, and a British investor earns the nickname "Chocolate Finger" for buying tons of cocoa beans. (06:23)
If Muslims really need to get together, they can meet at a camp or a compound out in the wilderness. (04:16)
Barney Frank wants Elizabeth Warren to head the consumer protection agency because she's an extraordinarily zealous pragmatist. (07:39)
George Will talks about the history of baseball, debates health care reform and criticizes Ronald Reagan. (06:34)