by Ken JP Stuczynski | Aug 14, 2014 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Religion & Spirituality, Society & Culture
Fellow citizens: You are slaves of fear. I see it every day, on the pages of Facebook, comments in the news, and casual opinions expressed on the street. There are fears for everyone, according to their ideological preferences and cultural identities — fear of...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | May 25, 2020 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Science & Pseudoscience, Society & Culture
I grew to believe over my lifetime, that as Americans, our liberties have been chipped away at for generations and I often felt I was the rare crackpot that noticed or cared. There are countless laws and permits for every occasion, and I’ve written and spoken...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Jun 5, 2014 | Uncategorized
{Adapted from a Facebook conversation} In subjects where it applies, I prefer the use of reason. It proves itself to be correct much, much more often than not. No matter how much BS is out there, with reasoning skills, good information is discernible from bad. It...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Aug 29, 2020 | Politics & Law
People are not educated about history, yet pass around strong opinions, parroting details they clearly didn’t know the day before. Where did they get them? Revisionist propaganda has been around forever, often skewed one way, then the other. Fake experts (most...
by Barry Fagin | Oct 11, 2010 | Philosophy & Ethics, Society & Culture
{Colorado Springs Gazette, 2005} Does anybody remember the original “Trivial Pursuit”? Ronald Reagan was president, “The Dukes of Hazard” was on TV, and George Lucas was finishing “Return of the Jedi.” If you’re in my demographic, you played it in your twenties...