Harry Moroz
| Hometown: | New York, NY |
| Interests: | An Economy for All, The Big Con, Quality Education, Invest In America, Progressive Vision, Revitalizing Democracy |
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Full Bio
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Harry's Voice
- October 28, 2008 - 1:58pm
This year's presidential campaign has not involved the "urban decline" rhetoric that rallied politicians - and policymakers - to the cause of cities in the mid 1960s and late 1970s. Instead, as Alex MacGillis pointed out in Sunday's WaPo, Senator Obama
- October 15, 2008 - 11:45am
As final preparations for the last presidential debate are made – water glasses weighed and secret memoranda consulted – both candidates have revamped their economic plans for the economic crisis now gripping
- Rated Poll: A Worried Middle Class Supports Progressive Policy (Blog entry) | August 19, 2008 - 2:25pm
- June 2, 2008 - 4:06pm
Despite an infuriatingly recalcitrant EPA chief and an administration that has suppressed major climate change research for the last four years, global warming is once again at the top of the nation’s policy agenda.
- May 15, 2008 - 3:51pm
“We need to imagine just what a clean, safe, efficient, dynamic, stimulating, just city would look like concretely – we need those images to confront critically our masters with what they should be doing – and just this critical imagination of the city is weak.”
- April 24, 2008 - 10:05am
As we nurse our collective hangover from the political bender that led up to yesterday’s primary, with heads now clear we can reflect for a moment on what we learned.
- April 2, 2008 - 9:40am
With the close of World War I, wartime propagandists found themselves unemployed, but with the enviable knowledge of how to manipulate millions of people to do their bidding.
- Commented On one hand, there are in a discussion on The Age of Infrastructure (Blog entry) | February 28, 2008 - 5:00pm
- Commented I’ll be investigating in a discussion on The Age of Infrastructure (Blog entry) | February 27, 2008 - 12:53pm
- February 26, 2008 - 5:47pm
Perhaps because national infrastructure is so amenable to physiological comparison – highways are the nation’s bloodstream, its sewage systems the digestive tract, its bridges synapses – it is also subject, at least in journalistic cliché, to one of life’s few inevitabilities: aging.






