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 Ken JP Stuczynski | Sep 13, 2012 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Society & Culture
America was founded by colonial peoples, defended with the blood of citizen soldiers, fueled with bountiful natural resources, and nurtured by frontier values and industriousness with parts played by visionary leaders and labor. But it wasn’t made great by...
by Barry Fagin | Jul 29, 2013 | Business & Economics, Education, Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, Aug 19th, 2010} âHypocrite! You’re always writing about how government needs to be smaller. But you work for a government institution! Why donât you write about that?â I get e-mails like this from time to time, I...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Jun 24, 2010 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Society & Culture
{Written as Chaplain of the SCV Buffalo Guards Chapter #1975, in August 2004} Over the last decade, I have had the honour of acquaintance with Steve Teeft, Civil War historian and founder and Commander of the Buffalo Guards Camp of the Sons of Confederate Veterans....
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Jun 2, 2011 | Politics & Law, Religion & Spirituality, Society & Culture
I have officially been branded an “Islamophile” by a few posters on the LinkedIn Tea Party group. My crime? Pointing out that condemning a whole religion because of the actions of SOME of its members is wrong. Pointing out that generalizations are...