by Ken JP Stuczynski | Mar 10, 2011 | Politics & Law, Society & Culture
Major grassroots movements have sprung up in the last four years to mark a tipping point from voter apathy to activism. No, I will not include the [[DNC]]’s [[astroturfing]] front group “[[Organizing for America]]” — a massively funded...
by Luis Clemente | Jan 3, 2015 | Politics & Law
{Published on Dateline: America} Like sports, strange things happen sometimes in politics. Virtually no one expected events like peace between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, the fall of the Soviet Bloc or the Arab Spring. Or this. Back in January, when...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | May 6, 2010 | Business & Economics, Philosophy & Ethics, Technology & Futurism
{from June 2005} Earlier this year, I got to speak with my cousin, Dr. Frank Pasquale III, who teaches law at Seton Hall about patent law, his specialty. It was a sloppy phone conversation, which in my usual eagerness did way too much talking and not enough listening,...
by Barry Fagin | Mar 28, 2011 | Religion & Spirituality, Science & Pseudoscience
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, 4-20-06} Now is not a good time to believe in intelligent design. A few weeks ago, Judge Jones’s ruling in the Dover case put the legal lid on ID’s coffin. Now it looks like science will pound in the nails. Just last...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Aug 7, 2014 | Religion & Spirituality, Society & Culture
{This essay was inspired by a discussion on LinkedIn after the posting of an article about changing demographics of those who identify themselves as “religious”.} When people talk about religion, it’s almost like they are speaking different...