by Ken JP Stuczynski | Dec 4, 2014 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law
Death by arrest. Be it New York City or Ferguson, Missouri, there is frustration at a broken system and society. Why? There are too many things to count. Every incident has its own circumstances and details, but it ultimately become the substance of sentiments of all...
by Barry Fagin | Dec 1, 2014 | Business & Economics, Politics & Law
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, March 13, 2014} Since I last wrote about the Ukraine (“Crisis in the Ukraine”, Gazette Opinion, Jan. 30), events have taken a dramatic turn. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has ordered troops to occupy...
by Luis Clemente | Nov 29, 2014 | Politics & Law
{Cross-published from Dateline: America} It took months for President Obama to honor his word of doing something on his own to reform American immigration policy, but he did do something in the end. In what is unquestionably the “make or break” moment of his last two...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Nov 27, 2014 | Politics & Law, Society & Culture
I here offer you words of thanksgiving, from another time — a time before exceptionalism run into the ground, and in contrast was cherished in a healthy and not imperialistic pride. I wonder how many of these words we can find meaning in today, or if we have...
by Barry Fagin | Nov 17, 2014 | Business & Economics, Politics & Law
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, February 27, 2014} What do the raging protest movements in the United States, Venezuela, the Ukraine, and Thailand have in common? They all want an end to corruption. “Occupy Wall Street” railed against the...
by Jeremy Gloff | Nov 16, 2014 | Politics & Law, Society & Culture
{Cross-published from the Jeremy Gloff Homepage} I got picked on a lot in high school. I am not angry or bitter towards my peers who relentlessly insulted me. I get it. I was different. They didn’t take the time to get to know me. It’s a social norm for one...