by Barry Fagin | Mar 25, 2013 | Religion & Spirituality, Society & Culture
{Published in the Colorado Springs Gazette, 2009-04-15} Today marks the last day of Passover, when Jews all over the world gather over a meal whose traditions go back to pre-biblical times. No matter what your level of observance, every one of us feels a special pull...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Aug 1, 2013 | Business & Economics, Politics & Law
Benefits of scale work in a free market, which is why it DOESN’T work that way under Obamacare. The fact is HMOs WANTED to cover “uninsurable” people, but people can’t afford the premiums and it would make them look bad, so why not have the...
by Ken JP Stuczynski | Oct 3, 2013 | Politics & Law, Society & Culture
Since no one seems to understand how the government works, I figured I’d try to explain it in terms that even a geek can understand. Think of the government as a family computer. Think of hard drive space as the Federal Budget, RAM as debt, and increasing the...
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 | May 1, 2015 | Philosophy & Ethics, Politics & Law, Society & Culture
I almost actively try not to follow the details of police shootings, if for no other reason than to avoid rehashing disparate facts and hearsay that are supposed to magically justify or admonish others in a tragedy — or even to argue if a life lost IS a tragedy....