Now that the election is over, Washington is transfixed by the fiscal cliff, the automatic tax increases and spending cuts due to take effect Jan. 1 if nothing is done.
The sudden shock could seriously damage the economy.
But some Democrats and policy analysts are suggesting that going over the fiscal cliff could help break the political logjam.
Murhaballadeja features a striking photo on the cover: Two beefy, big-jawed men with cruel eyes are in prison garb, shackled with heavy chains at the neck, wrists, knees and feet. Turns out they're legendary 19th century murderers from Finland. These are the kinds of characters you'll find in a collection of murder ballads from Kimmo Pohjonen.
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Founding of the People's Republic of China," 1st edition, 1953. (Note senior party official Gao Gang, who stands at the far right.)
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Founding of the People's Republic of China," 3rd edition, 1978. (Note Gao Gang has disappeared. He was purged from the party and committed suicide in 1954.)
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
Mao Zedong and Joseph Stalin. 1951
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Firmly support U.S. people against U.S. imperialism invading Vietnam." 1966
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"The Tibetan people welcome the People's Liberation Army." (Tibet was essentially autonomous for decades before Chinese communist troops entered in 1950.)
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"John rides the ox and I am on the horse, what a shame if he wins the game." (Great Leap Forward) 1958
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Keep on alert." 1971
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Thoroughly smash the reactionary organization of 'proletarian union.' " 1967
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"The Red Detachment of Women (Modern Revolutionary Ballet)." 1970
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Make contribution for the modernization of science and technology." 1978
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Develop coal mining in the lower Yangtze Village to change the situation of transporting coal only from north to south." 1972
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Mutual aid and mutual love to produce more actively." 1954
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
An example of a Shanghai Lady poster from the 1930s
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Pond is full of fish." 1987
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
"Be ready always." 1989
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
A 1967 poster declares, "Beloved Chairman Mao, we are loyal to you forever."
Credit Courtesy of the Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center
A poster at the museum shows a Chinese man on horseback racing past a portly British soldier. The caption reads, "John rides the ox and I am the horse, what a shame if he wins the game."
The Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Center lies buried in an unmarked apartment building off the tree-lined streets of the city's former French Concession. There are no signs. You have to wend your way through apartment blocks, down a staircase and into a basement to discover one of Shanghai's most obscure and remarkable museums.
Day-Lewis used firsthand accounts of Abraham Lincoln's speeches, along with his personal letters, to develop a voice and a style for Steven Spielberg's biographical drama.
Credit Lefteris Pitarakis / AP
Daniel Day-Lewis is known for his intense preparation for roles in films such as There Will Be Blood.
Daniel Day-Lewis has won two Academy Awards for fully immersing himself in his characters in There Will Be Blood and My Left Foot.
Now the British actor is taking on one of America's most iconic figures in Steven Spielberg's Lincoln, playing the 16th president during the final months of his life. Day-Lewis tells NPR's Melissa Block that it was a daunting prospect — but that ultimately Lincoln was a surprisingly accessible figure.
As the old saying goes, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. In other words, the child takes after the parent; the son is a chip off the old block.
Of course, that's often not the case. Straight parents have gay children and vice versa; autistic children are born to parents who don't have autism; and transgender kids are born to parents who are perfectly comfortable with their gender.
Istanbul: Somebody's stolen a hard drive with info sensitive enough that ... oh, who cares? Bond is giving chase, and that's all that matters — cars careening through bazaars, motorcycles flying across rooftops until Daniel Craig's 007 lands atop a speeding train.
The mercury hit 100 for ten consecutive days in some places last summer, and the drought of 2012 may be a preview of what climate change will bring: amber waves of extremely short corn.
Credit Abby Fentress Swanson / Harvest Public Media
This field is part of a 160-acre tract in Saline County, Mo., that sold for $10,700 per acre in February — double what it would have gone for five years ago.
Credit Harvest Public Media
Click the map to see how the price of farmland has gone up. Produced by Harvest Public Media.
Howard Audsley has been driving through Missouri for the past 30 years to assess the value of farmland. Barreling down the flat roads of Saline County on a recent day, he stopped his truck at a 160-acre tract of newly tilled black land. The land sold in February for $10,700per acre, double what it would have gone for five years ago.
Heading out into the field, Audsley picked up a clod of the dirt that makes this pocket of land some of the priciest in the state.
If you've ever checked the ingredient list on a PowerBar or a high-protein smoothie, you probably have stumbled across these words: "Whey protein concentrate." You'll find it in a growing number of prepared foods.
This mysterious ingredient is derived from one of the oldest of human foods — milk. But capturing it requires huge factories that look more like oil refineries than farms.
Many religious conservatives thought this might be the year of an evangelical comeback, when voters would throw President Obama out because of his support of same-sex marriage and abortion, and his health plan's birth control mandate. It didn't work out that way.
"I think this was an evangelical disaster," says Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky.