by Barry Fagin | Oct 24, 2011 | Politics & Law
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, 6-28-07} From time to time, I get email from the Colorado Republican Party. This latest one to hit my Inbox is all about principles. I like principles. I think they’re important. They tell others where you stand, and even if...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Mar 13, 2013 | Uncategorized
My wife found this article from a blog for Sugar Mountain Farm. It’s basically an education on the various cuts of pork (not the political kind, the actual meat) yet is interspersed with profound yet common sense lessons in economic justice. Reality of...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Oct 13, 2011 | Business & Economics, Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Society & Culture
A fellow member of the Global Citizenship Forum on LinkedIn, Rocio Evenett, contributed the following passage regarding her experiences in different countries they lived in. Being a global citizen (American / Mexican / British) has given me a unique perspective of...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Jul 29, 2014 | Politics & Law, Society & Culture, Technology & Futurism
This TED Talk is tame, but foreboding. It tells of companies that sell technology to governments — some and potentially all that use it not merely for law enforcement (terrorism, child predators, etc.) but to spy on citizens at will, monitoring even the...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Dec 16, 2010 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Psychology, Science & Pseudoscience, Society & Culture
The American people have grown weary of partisanship. We know this is true because of the very existence of the Tea Part and Coffee Party. But even those are influenced by the constant gravity of one end of the political spectrum or the other. There are other words...