Search Results for: env – Page 3

Gen Z Unplugging and Happier

Young Americans are increasingly unplugging from screens, embracing analogue habits like reading books and setting daily offline time, and reporting greater happiness, calm, and connection.

Learn More

Fear of Nature on the Rise

A growing aversion to nature – biophobia – is driving people indoors, weakening support for conservation and posing risks to public health and environmental protection.

Learn More

In Their 40’s and Lonely

An AARP study finds loneliness surging among adults over 45, as shrinking social circles, life transitions, and limited community engagement deepen disconnection.

Learn More

Camping Sparks New Friendships

Campers say they often make four new friends per trip, as the unplugged, community-focused environment of campgrounds encourages easy conversation, genuine connection, and shared experiences.

Learn More

The End of Naked Spaces

The decline of casual nudity in American locker rooms reflects shifting cultural norms around privacy and consent, leaving everyday bodies increasingly hidden and highly sexualized.

Learn More

The Age of Anti-Social Media

Social media giants are now pivoting towards AI-driven interactions, as Mark Zuckerberg suggests AI chatbots might fill the gap in declining face-to-face socialization.

Learn More

Can Partisan Love Work?

Most Americans under 45 factor politics into dating decisions, prompting a WHYY discussion on whether love can thrive between partners with opposing political beliefs.

Learn More

Are New Vices Making Us Lonely?

As alcohol consumption declines and solitary vices like marijuana, online gambling, and internet pornography rise, Americans are increasingly pursuing pleasure alone, reshaping social habits.

Learn More

The Death of a Radio Icon

Beloved Philly DJ Pierre Robert’s passing symbolizes the decline of community-centered media amid corporate consolidation, eroding trust, and the fading era of truly local voices.

Learn More

How Delivery Changed Dining

Tech-enabled food delivery has transformed American dining, turning restaurants into profit-driven takeout factories and eroding the in-person experiences that once defined them.

Learn More

Let Independent Voters Vote

More than one million independent voters in Pennsylvania are barred from participating in primary elections, a policy now being challenged as a state Constitution violation.

Learn More

Middle Class Dining on the Wane

As casual dining chains decline, families are losing affordable sit-down meal options, impacting communal dining experiences and human connections once fostered by these middle-class restaurants.

Learn More

Sex Without Women

Men are increasingly preferring the ease and satisfaction of online porn, finding themselves emotionally disconnected to real relationships, especially with women.

Learn More

The Teen Loneliness Machine

Today’s teens are spending more time online and less time socializing in person, creating a tech-driven loneliness crisis that parents and educators struggle to address.

Learn More

Y2K’s 25th Anniversary

On the 25th anniversary of Y2K, national security expert Richard Clarke recounts the extraordinary bipartisan efforts that kept global systems running January 1, 2000.

Learn More

What Now for Democrats?

In the wake of their recent loss, Shanin Specter calls on Democrats to prioritize unity and strategic compromise to regain centrist voters and push for meaningful policy change.

Learn More

What We Can Learn From SuperAgers

Northwestern researchers are studying “SuperAgers”—older adults with exceptional memory—to uncover insights into aging, memory preservation, and ultimately find ways to prevent dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Learn More

How Much Does the VP Pick Matter?

Jeffrey Green argues that while Harris’s choice of running mate may have minimal direct impact on the election, it will reflect her judgment and could shape her future political trajectory.

Learn More

An Ocean Between Us

Despite his European roots, Trump’s foreign policy and business interests suggest he may not prioritize defending Slovenia or other European nations unless they meet his defense spending expectations.

Learn More

Un-Natural Surprises

UCLA Professor Daniel Blumstein outlines a scenario where interconnected threats, including climate change and nuclear risks, could impact the upcoming election.

Learn More

Election Season Surprises: Scenario 3

In his ongoing series on presidential campaign crisis preparations, Richard Clarke details how campaigns might plan for a potential Israel-Hizballah war involving drone attacks and missile strikes, and how candidates could respond.

Learn More

We’re Selling Biden Short

Dr. Brian Rosenwald argues that despite low approval ratings, Biden is a narrow favorite over Trump due to better fundraising, Trump’s legal troubles, and positive economic data.

Learn More

The GOP’s Lurch to the Right

Brian Rosenwald contends that the GOP has shifted dramatically to the right, making past conservative figures seem moderate by today’s standards, a profound realignment within American political dynamics.

Learn More

Are Human Embryos Persons?

A doctor grounded in both science and faith navigates the contentious debate over whether embryos are considered beings, blending scientific insight with ethics.

Learn More

The GOP Hands Biden a Trump Card

President Biden has the chance to turn GOP’s political miscalculations into a decisive executive action on border security, altering the immigration conversation before the election.

Learn More

The Rise and Fall of Sports Illustrated

From its 1954 debut as a cultural staple to its peak as a moral authority in sports journalism, and eventual decline in the face of digital transformation, Michael Bamberger chronicles the storied journey of Sports Illustrated.

Learn More

Twenty-Three of the Best Opening Lines of 2023

Explore the art of storytelling through its most impactful moment with Dr. Mardy Grothe’s annual showcase of the finest literary openers from 2023, demonstrating the captivating and inspiring power of the first sentence in each narrative.

Learn More

The Great Cousin Decline

As families shrink and the number of cousins declines dramatically, these often underestimated relationships may become vital anchors for emotional support and family cohesion.

Learn More

Here’s How to Reform Social Media

“Zuckerberg testified that ‘instead of being granted immunity, platforms should be required to demonstrate that they have systems in place for identifying unlawful content and removing it.’ Clearly, the time has come to revisit immunity.”

Learn More

Whatever Happened to the Dreamers?

From bipartisan beginnings to a complex legislative battleground, the story of America’s Dreamers reveals the evolving challenges and misconceptions surrounding DACA and the elusive Dream Act.

Learn More

A Theocrat at the Helm

Speaker Mike Johnson’s faith-based policies starkly contrast with America’s secular democratic foundations, highlighting critical questions about maintaining the separation of church and state.

Learn More

The Politics of Perception

Despite a booming economy under Biden, with rising GDP and wages outpacing inflation, Americans still perceive economic woes, challenging the president’s political standing ahead of the election.

Learn More

Focus on the House of Representatives

In a twist to the 2024 U.S. Presidential race, No Labels Group’s push for alternative candidates amidst voter discontent with Biden and Trump raises questions about electoral outcomes and the pivotal role of House races.

Learn More

Televising the Trump Trial

“Anywhere the citizenry can walk in, pull up a chair, and watch its government function, there ought to be a camera permitted,” argues Michael Smerconish, advocating for public access to the inner workings of justice.

Learn More

All “Right?” Already!

In a world where facts and fiction blur, Podcaster and Former ‘Seinfeld’ writer Andy Cowan dissects how the excessive use of ‘Right?’ in conversations highlights our quest for agreement and the risk of echo chambers stifling diverse opinions.

Learn More

Voting With Conviction

Is Trump’s legal peril a political asset? Michael Smerconish explores how his mounting indictments and trials might paradoxically strengthen his grip on the GOP nomination.

Learn More

How Best to Remember October 7th

Frank Wrinn uncovers the enduring impact of the October 7 Kibbutzim Massacre, a pivotal event in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, remembered from varied perspectives around the world.

Learn More

Education’s Turning Point in Central Bucks

In a critical moment for Central Bucks, Katherine Semisch’s op-ed confronts divisive issues in education, advocating for inclusive, effective schooling amid political turmoil, with the November election set as a pivotal turning point.

Learn More

Crunch Time in Detroit

Amidst an ongoing UAW strike and escalating industry concerns, the disparity between workers’ and CEO pay in traditional automakers collides with the looming shadow of Tesla’s cost efficiency and market dominance.

Learn More

Kit Carson’s Strategy for Gaza

In the shadow of Col. Kit Carson’s 1864 strategy, Israel grapples with a historic decision: engage in a ground invasion or employ a patient siege against Hamas – which path holds the key to victory and international support?

Learn More

From Insular to Inclusive: A Journey to the Center

From a Yeshiva’s celebration of Israel to confronting harsh realities at Hunter College, Charles Chakkalo journeys from staunch defense to understanding the complexities of the Israel-Palestine conflict, while recognizing the unequivocal nature of terror.

Learn More

The War 50 Years After the War

As Israel faces echoes of the Yom Kippur War’s surprise attack, the stakes are high, and the risks of a broader conflict involving major powers loom large. Will history repeat itself, or can we address the root causes to prevent future wars in the region?

Learn More

Democrats’ Missed Opportunity

In a tumultuous political landscape, Michael Smerconish delves into the Democrats’ decision regarding Kevin McCarthy, the looming shadow of Jim Jordan, and the potential for new alliances in Congress.

Learn More

Stocks, Bonds, and Politics… Oh, My!

Dive into Rhys Williams’ expert analysis on the economic and political shifts toward 2024, as he uncovers the potential pitfalls and opportunities ahead, asserting, “the path to the White House leads through Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.”

Learn More

Joe Biden Needs Opponents

In a candid reflection on Joe Biden’s presidency, Shanin Specter urges the Democratic party to embrace the inevitable: a rigorous primary could be the Democrats’ best hope against Trump in 2024.

Learn More

Education’s Fragility Exposed

In a post-pandemic educational crisis with declining enrollment and achievement, mass resignations, and divisive issues, Dr. Vincent F. Cotter examines the disconnects in the education system and calls for a unified approach to stabilize and grow schools.

Learn More

On Risks and Catastrophes

From the Space Shuttle to the Titan submersible, Scott Jackson probes the hidden assumptions behind some of history’s most devastating technological failures, and asks whether engineers are truly asking the right questions about risk.

Learn More

Joan Baez in Ukraine: A New Voice of Hope

Journey through a war-torn landscape: iconic activist singer Joan Baez and her team navigate the frontlines of Ukraine’s struggle, uniting in song and solidarity with the resilient children bearing the brunt of the conflict.

Learn More

The WGA on Strike, SAG on Strike

In the shadow of an impending AI revolution, Joan Juliet Buck paints a grim reality for Hollywood’s actors and writers, who stand against mega-rich CEOs in a struggle reminiscent of Fritz Lang’s 1927 Metropolis.

Learn More

The Complicated Reality of Cluster Munitions

Delving into the controversy of arming Ukraine with cluster munitions, unravel the United States’ rationale behind its stand on the weapon, balancing military necessity with humanity, and the necessity for ensuring moral responsibility in wielding such devastating power.

Learn More

How to Solve Homelessness

We’re left with a catch-22, where cities and citizens are locked in a relentless cycle of being forced to accept the unacceptable. By now, it’s clear that homelessness will never solve itself. So here’s a proposal, one that requires national will and investment…

Learn More

COVID-19: A Mass Casualty

Despite top readiness rankings, the U.S.’s calamitous COVID-19 response, marked by misinformation, inadequate resources, and poor leadership, raises a grim question – are we equipped for the next health crisis?

Learn More

Trauma: The Key to Evolution

Discover former NFL running back Femi Ayanbadejo’s inspiring journey from trauma to NFL stardom, entrepreneurship, and resilience, showcasing how personal trials can fuel growth and bring out the ‘badass’ within.

Learn More

Adult Home Rules Encourage Evictions

“We cannot meet his needs; he cannot come back,” a chilling voice message left by a med technician on my phone, starkly unveiling the harsh reality of evictions in adult care homes for dementia patients.

Learn More

Drop the Tox: The Hidden Dangers in Our Daily Lives

“‘Our children are swimming around in a toxic soup,’ said RFK Jr. to Michael Smerconish on June 5th, 2023. RFK Jr. might have a lot of controversial opinions, but this statement is not.” Says Kaitlyn Pany, a high school junior with a passion for the impacts of environmental toxins on the human body.

Learn More

The Global Chessboard of Nuclear Power

It seems the world gradually edging towards a new Cold War era driven by rising tensions among nuclear nations and escalating weapons development, with around 12,700 global nuclear warheads reported by the end of 2022.

Learn More

By the Numbers: Why Gun Control Will Not Work

Delve into a balanced examination of common gun-control assertions, offering responses that challenge popular views and suggest that given America’s unique history and firearm prevalence, gun ownership may be a rational decision for many individuals.

Learn More

Save the Static!

With automakers removing AM radios from cars, there’s a bipartisan effort to save the century-old technology. If it goes away, will conservative talk radio lose its power? No, says Michael Smerconish, “it will just be found on different platforms.”

Learn More

The Consulting Industry Must Survive Beijing’s Onslaught

The importance of maintaining and rebalancing the U.S.-China relationship cannot be overstated, particularly within the consulting industry, as it plays a pivotal role in formulating constructive engagement strategies that safeguard commercial exchange and avert the possibility of a cold war.

Learn More

Trump/Harris 2024

Trump and DeSantis appear at dueling rallies, but combined, they could form a stronger ticket against Biden and Harris despite potential complications due to residing in the same state.

Learn More

Our National Conversation on Aging

Now that President Biden officially declared his run for a second term, now more than ever, we need to acknowledge how outdated notions about age and retirement can be harmful and why we need to reimagine work, retirement, and aging in 21st-century America.

Learn More

Why Every City Needs a Chief Democracy Officer

In light of lingering questions about American democracy post-2020 election and the Jan. 6 insurrection, Philadelphia proposes a chief democracy officer to address voting barriers, increase turnout, ensure fairness, and offer nonpartisan voter education. Will other cities follow suit?

Learn More

Dominion’s Riches Come at Our Expense

Serving as a blueprint for navigating high-profile civil cases, there are critical lessons from the Dominion v Fox litigation in the importance of public disclosure, remediation, and accountability, as well as the potential drawbacks of large monetary settlements.

Learn More

More Than a Contract

The Fair Chance Housing Ordinance seeks justice by combating rental discrimination, fostering safer communities, and supporting families amidst high incarceration rates and changing court rulings on housing access.

Learn More

President Tsai Visits the U.S.

Amid escalating tensions, President Tsai’s visit to the U.S. sparks swift retaliation and military exercises from China, while also exposing divisions within Taiwan’s political landscape and foreshadowing the upcoming presidential election’s potential impact on regional stability.

Learn More

Filling Out Free Forms Can Fix Medicare

Discover how promoting advance directives, a powerful tool for individual choice in end-of-life care, could potentially save billions of dollars in healthcare costs without sacrificing patient autonomy or quality of care.

Learn More

Swing Voters Say “Don’t Link Childcare to Chips”

In a focus group with Wisconsin swing voters, Engagious prompted questions about tying childcare to the Chips Act, which aims to reduce US reliance on other countries for technology inputs. Within the discussions, they uncovered a familiar trend seen in Americans known as “silo” mindsets.

Learn More

Our Kids Are in Crisis

Recognizing the difference between unhappiness and disobedience has never been so crucial as last month, the CDC revealed that 42% of high school students reported experiencing persistent sadness or hopelessness, and 22% seriously considered suicide. Our children are screaming at us that they need help.

Learn More

Will Trump Say Cheese?

Former President Trump could be indicted and arrested in New York County as early as this week. Weighty constitutional issues arise with charging a former president and a presidential candidate. There are also issues that do not implicate the constitution, but are equally compelling. Like: should Trump smile for a mugshot?

Learn More

St. Patty’s or St. Paddy’s? Why Not Both?

St. Patrick’s Day is as much, if not more, an Irish-American holiday as it is Irish. While the day was observed as a holy day in Ireland for centuries, it evolved into the iconic event and celebration that we know today in America, not Ireland.

Learn More

Urban School’s Disappearing Act

While it is understandable that schools may want to compare themselves to others with similar demographics and challenges, at what point is it acceptable to be satisfied with mediocrity, let alone failure?

Learn More

Let’s Stop Talking About a Two-State Solution

For years, and by years I mean decades, we have been hearing that the answer to the crisis in the Middle East is to create a two-state solution by dividing Israel into Jewish and Palestinian sovereign nations. While those words sound like a good idea to many, the practical matter is that it’s more fiction than ‘Die Hard 8’ might be.

Learn More

Jimmy Who? A Legacy of Leadership

Those old enough to remember the Carter administration are as likely to recall stagflation, gasoline price hikes, and the Iran hostage crisis as the Middle East peace accord Carter brokered at Camp David or his forward-thinking environmental policies. Yet with the perspective of time, it is now clear that President Carter was a gifted leader.

Learn More

Why Diplomacy Needs to Catch Up with the World

Few of us would put diplomacy in the same category as climate issues or global pandemics as something that affects our daily lives. It is, after all, something that the world has done for centuries, largely away from the glare of international public opinion. So why does diplomacy need now to catch up with the world?

Learn More

ChatGPT is an Autocrat’s Best Friend

OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Bard, and other Large Language Models (LLMs) have been all the rage for the past few months. However, one of its most deeply concerning aspects is that I got it to lie to me willfully.

Learn More

Thank you, John Fetterman.

You might remember that I was critical of Pennsylvania’s Lieutenant Governor during his campaign for the U.S. Senate. Now comes the news that the junior Senator from Pennsylvania admitted himself to a center for treatment of clinical depression. We need a role model right now. Here’s hoping he fills that bill.

Learn More

Just Getting Started at 75

We must reimagine 21st-century life where 75 plus marks a robust time of engagement and work. We cannot sacrifice the momentum critical to achieving our society’s healthy aging goals to pessimistic, regressive notions of what getting old is “like.”

Learn More

The Missing Link in the Obesity Epidemic

We view health and weight as an individual problem or responsibility rather than a societal one. And while I agree that there is a substantial individual component to health, what is severely lacking from the mainstream conversation around obesity is the issue of health equity.

Learn More

The Problem with Trump’s Latest Education Proposals

In a video, former president Trump outlined radical proposals to withhold funding for states that support CRT, protect religious freedom, and bar trans athletes from sports. But these face little chance of becoming policy; even if Trump could secure reelection, he would soon discover that the federal government has minimal authority and oversight over American public education.

Learn More

Let’s Teach Our Children About AI Well

After ChatGPT prompted panic across the educational community, FlexSchool’s leadership team chose to do what we do with any new policy discussion: we took it to the neurodiverse, gifted, and twice-exceptional students to gain their unique perspectives.

Learn More

My Dinner With Musharraf

Michael’s dinner with ex-Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, where the two discussed the Bush Administration, foreign policy, Osama bin Laden, and America’s then-perception of Pakistan.

Learn More

The Ticking Time Bomb in the Public Square

Against the backdrop of an economy steadily emerging from three years of pandemic-induced turmoil, House Republicans sit with their finger on the trigger of a nuclear bomb, as chief economist Mark Zandi warned that a failure by Congress to raise the debt ceiling on a timely basis could have disastrous consequences.

Learn More

Preparing for a Russian Cyberattack

If an all-out cyberwar were to commence tomorrow in the United States, the attackers would have some ripe and possibly easy-to-hit targets that would not only disrupt our lives but also throw our society and economy into chaos.

Learn More

Do We Have a Secrets Problem?

At the most fundamental level, our national security secrecy system is about knowledge. If the targets of our information collection learn how we acquire it, they may be able to block our future access.

Learn More

Create Your Own Junto

Engaging in discourse is essential to a functioning democracy. If you spend little time consuming political media that differs from your own viewpoints, maybe consider joining a Junto!

Learn More

No “Top Secret Alien Documents”

What might aliens think of our way of life? This abstract op-ed by Timothy Philen explores that age-old question and more themes through the eyes of a young extraterrestrial who is sent to Earth to be “scared straight.”

Learn More

Use the Word Obamacare as a Teachable Moment

Let’s face it, no matter who uses the word “Obamacare,” it is not a “neutral” term. It is not devoid of politics. The same would have been true if Democrats or the media had personalized the healthcare law and named it “Trumpcare” during the Trump administration.

Learn More

Brazil Riots Could Mark a Sea Change in Our Politics

When we look at Brazil, it feels like we are looking through a window at the history of Latin America. The juntas, coups, assassinations, and authoritarian rulers trampling nascent democratic institutions… but this time, it is not a window we are looking through, but rather a mirror reflecting back on ourselves.

Learn More

End of Life Decisions Could Be About Rational Choices

Why doesn’t legalized MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying) work for those who rationally choose to end life earlier rather than accept a prolonged experience devoid of dignity? Currently, ten states and Washington D. C. allow ending life with medical assistance. But all is not as it might appear as the laws are written. 

Learn More

Inside the Minds of Crime-Studying Criminals

It seems many people are shocked that Bryan Kohberger – the alleged killer of four University of Idaho Students– was a graduate student in criminology. Well, I am not that shocked, and if you polled New York City cops, I’m sure many of them would not be either.

Learn More

The FAA Shows Us That U.S. Infrastructure Is Seriously at Risk

For years, cybersecurity experts have been warning that the technological infrastructure in the United States is seriously at risk. Now the FAA just showed us that consistency in the government’s technological infrastructure has serious issues that are years overdue for fixing. And while that may not be the end of the world, it could have a serious impact on millions of people.

Learn More

“Tell It Early, Tell It All, Tell It Yourself”

Those are the words of Lanny Davis, the Clinton confidante and crisis manager, who wrote a whole book called Truth to Tell on how to handle a public crisis. Davis’ advice is the exact opposite of the approach of the Biden White House to date around the discovery of classified documents in his possession.  

Learn More

Defending Property: Is the Karon Blake Shooter Liable?

The man who fatally shot 13-year-old Karon Blake shortly before 4 a.m. reportedly believed someone was breaking into cars and shot Blake to defend those vehicles from theft. Is the shooter likely to be able to claim defense of those cars as a justification for the shooting?

Learn More

A Philly Funambulist

The Smerconish.com editor gives some context to her circus past, answers some of the most common questions about tightwire walking, and hopes she still has a job at the end of the day.

Learn More

How Could George Santos Happen? Ask The New York Times

Since the New York Times broke the story about the fictitious Santos resume on December 19, almost all of the news coverage and statements by politicians have focused on how to punish Santos: Should Santos resign? Should there be an ethics investigation? A criminal indictment? Should he be expelled?

Learn More

California’s Homeless TAY

We have all heard this before, but it certainly applies to California’s seemingly intractable issue of reducing homelessness. Cities are being overrun, many millions are spent, and yet the numbers grow. Why? The issue is a complex societal issue dating back decades as the family unit started failing. It has gotten even more complicated in the 21st Century.

Learn More

Bipartisan Trucker Bathroom Access Act

On December 15th, Representative Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA) and Representative Troy E. Nehls (R-TX) introduced the bipartisan Trucker Bathroom Access Act. It just seems like basic human decency to me. Why did I have to wait 35 years for something like this?

Learn More

Keep Cameras in the Congress

If you can walk in off the street, so too should a camera be able to film. That goes for local township building, city hall, school board meeting, state legislature, courtroom, and the Supreme Court of the United States. . .and without any limitation as to camera angle. Whatever the naked eye can see, so too should cameras at public meetings.

Learn More

A History Professor for the Supreme Court

If we follow the plain text and the historical context at the time of the Constitution, a professor of English or history would be as qualified as any attorney to interpret the plain text of the Constitution and understand the nation’s history at its founding.

Learn More

Why the World Is Mourning Mountain Lion

This may be the first time in history that a mountain lion took over the internet. Yet perhaps the question many of those not already in the P-22 fan club are asking is, why would the world mourn a mountain lion?

Learn More

The Disintegration of “Downtown”

With an excess of available jobs and not enough qualified candidates, those left to do the work have been given increased responsibilities and not always an equal bump in compensation. However, even if the money is put on the table, employees push back and say no… because they can.

Learn More

The Truth, the Whole Truth, and Nothing but…

Although the First Amendment protects our right to free speech, there is no unalienable right to deceive. Free speech does not mean freedom from responsibility, and for any that attempts to use the shield of unnecessary censorship in the advancement of falsehood, that pretext needs to be stopped in its tracks. Free speech does not mean freedom from the obligation to speak the truth.

Learn More

It’s 2050 in Singapore

As the new year dawns, many of us who live or work in a big city are looking for just a scrap of progress.  But for those yearning for more radical change — a year 2050 real-life utopia  — check out Singapore, as our family did for a week in December.

Learn More

New Year State of Mind

As Charles Darwin argued, the species that survive are those most responsive to change. In the spirit of that hopeful idea, I list here my simple Resolve Model for anyone who might wish to try personal resolve and commitments in helping alter aspects of their life in a new Era.

Learn More

The Departure

A poetic exclusive: “I awoke one morning to the shadows reflected on the wall from my curtains… and then I remembered Ukraine.”

Learn More

Can We Fix Our ‘Broken’ Health Care System?

While the US has the best doctors and hospitals in the world, many Americans cannot afford to access the advances of modern medicine because of a lack of basic health insurance. The United States is the only nation in the world that does not provide health coverage for all its citizens… and our health is suffering because of this.  

Learn More

Twenty-Two of the Best Opening Lines of 2022

When the site was launched, I commemorated the event by doing a Smerconish.com post on “Twenty of the Best Opening Lines of 2020”.   A year later, I followed up with a similar list for 2021.  This marks my third compilation of the best opening lines of the year, and I’m hoping to make this an annual tradition.  Let’s jump right in.

Learn More

Off to the (Kentucky) Races

It’s off to the races in Kentucky. No, not the horse races, which Kentucky is famous for, but the race for the Republican candidate for Governor.  There are currently eleven candidates in the race.  But there is one “long shot” with big odds that may pay off in a big way.  His name is Alan Keck.

Learn More

Yes or No?

What is it going to take for us to courageously use our common sense, our sense of decency, the innate sense of our humanity, and take action needed to stop mass shootings?

Learn More

The Navy’s Policy Needs to Change

To its future recruits, the U.S. Navy promises adventure and the opportunity to visit exotic ports worldwide. But it’s failing its sailors who want to leave after military service. Two former sailors, participants in my non-profit, demonstrate how the Navy could have better helped them with their transition to new opportunities after their service.

Learn More

2022 Civics Scholarship Contest Winners

This year’s students were challenged to write an essay answering the question; “Should the Constitution be interpreted based on a literal reading of the document’s original text (“originalism”) or viewed in the context of our nation’s evolving social, scientific and other changes since the time when it was written (a “living constitution”) and why?”

Learn More

Technology in the Fight to End Mass Shootings

We must focus our approach on what has been often referred to as “American Excellence.” In this case, that refers to the use of technology to approach the issue of mass shootings from schools, concerts, and other highly attended venues.

Learn More

Social Media Is a Failed Experiment

As social media sites came to fruition, the idea of providing users with an emotional support structure by linking them to their closest friends faltered and devolved. Why? The answer is multifaceted, but at its core, it’s simply this: some people just suck.

Learn More

A Case for NASA’s Artemis Missions

There have been many questions surrounding Artemis, which includes all of NASA’s human and robotic missions to the Moon in the 21st century. I want to provide a NASA flight director’s perspective on what the Artemis human spaceflight missions are about and why we are undertaking the most complex human space exploration missions in history.

Learn More

The I’s Have It

Arizona Senator Kyrsten Sinema just announced a change in her party registration from Democratic to Independent. She’s got lots of company. 

Learn More

Unreliable Oracles

Prediction markets, like any markets, are real-time aggregators of information. Not just of raw data but of overlaid analysis, tinged – for better or worse – with intuition and emotion.

Learn More

Should the Homeless Be Hospitalized?

Here in Manhattan, mayor Eric Adams is under attack for his approach to what we’ve come to call homelessness. This week the mayor announced the city would begin hospitalizing more of the population that is in “psychiatric crisis.” In reading the new directive, I was surprised by how little of a policy shift it should represent.

Learn More

Can Golf Save the World?

Given today’s current politically polarized society, golf allows two people the chance to talk things through. Golf is more than a game; it’s a regulated platform, more personal and, I’d argue, miles more effective than social media. It’s a vehicle, if not for solving problems, at least for a beginning.

Learn More

When is News Not News?

We need some distance, some sobriety, to see the discourse clearly, and ask a few simple questions: Why is this dinner, attended by a proven New White Nationalist, joined by guests who themselves are New White Nationalists, to talk about their New White Nationalist ideas, a story at all?

Learn More

A Krafty Lawsuit

A Florida woman is suing Kraft Heinz for allegedly misleading advertising based on the time the box says it takes to microwave a cup of macaroni and cheese.

Learn More

Must We Learn to Live With It?

No amount of carnage — even involving kids — will give politicians the willingness to address a uniquely American problem. We aren’t inherently more violent than the rest of the planet, nor do we have a monopoly on mental health problems here in the United States. Our kids are not the only ones to watch movies and play violent video games. What sets us apart is the access to and inventory of guns.

Learn More

The Bipartisan Thanksgiving Family Survival Guide

Thanksgiving is a reminder that there’s more that unites us as Americans than divides us. We don’t believe families should avoid politics when they get together over the holidays. After all, if we can’t discuss important issues with our loved ones, how can we expect our leaders to work together?

Learn More

Change Change Change

While having things stay the same is comfortable, unfortunately, keeping things the same is neither the nature nor the path of our existence. That is why, when it comes to change, the first thing that must happen is acceptance.

Learn More

Georgia Swing Voters to House GOP: Avoid Most Investigations

While Congressional Republicans have expressed interest in investigating Hunter Biden, Anthony Fauci, the FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago, and the withdrawal from Afghanistan, the latest focus group conducted by the Swing Voter Project made it clear that voters aren’t interested in political investigations that don’t focus on the issues that matter most to them.

Learn More

Thanks, I’ll Show Myself Out

Lynda ran to the cry. “Oh. My. God.”  She exclaimed. You know that whatever is going to follow that opening is rarely good news.  I walked into the living room.  She didn’t even give me a chance to ask, but just pointed toward the baseboard.

Learn More

Antisemitism Cannot Go Unanswered

What seemed unimaginable to many Jews in the American Diaspora just a few years ago has now become a living reality, and for some a nightmare. Incidents against the Jewish community occur daily. What seemed to happen only in other parts of the world is taking place right here in the Land of the Free and Home of the Brave.

Learn More

The Policies that Hurt Veterans

HIPAA regulations would imply a sense of duty for the patients they protect, but recent deficiencies have been observed by veterans– including former US Navy civilian Nurse Kathy Pokorny when these procedures failed her late son and Army Special Force Soldier, James.

Learn More

Why Twitter Will Die

To be clear, Twitter itself could live on for years as a website and app people can visit and use. What will die were the intentions of well-minded people trying to make Twitter into something it could never be; a place for open, honest, intelligent, and rational discussion or debate. If Twitter were a horse, Musk just shot it in the leg with a rather large gun.

Learn More

An Uncivil War

The weapon of choice in this war – words. The devastation caused by this weapon of mass destruction – incalculable.

Learn More

As It Barrels Ahead, Is the Fed Flirting With Disaster?

For months now, the Governors of the Federal Reserve have insisted that they would not be deterred from raising interest rates until there is strong evidence that inflation is coming down, and since the release of the inflation numbers for September, the Fed has been barreling toward more large increases in interest rates. Then, seemingly out of the blue – with no particularly positive news on the inflation front to point to – a few Fed Governors started whistling a different tune.

Learn More

Ye’s Rants: A Jewish Perspective

The brilliance of the Jewish Conspiracy is that it is so malleable, flexible, and reliable for those that spew hate in order to mobilize people to their agendas. So how can I convince you that we are not at the center of some mastermind plot, pulling the strings, and controlling your livelihood? It is a tough challenge, but let me start by telling you about some Jewish people that I know very well…

Learn More

Letter from Houston

It starts with the traffic to the ballpark, made worse by sharing city streets and red lights with Friday afternoon commuters. A drop-off a few blocks away saves time and then it’s a miserable exercise to avoid the puddles on uneven sidewalks.

Learn More

Classes Need to be Challenging to Ensure Success

Before attending college, I always prided myself on being a straight-A student. But my grade after this initial exam made me lose my ever-loving mind! I couldn’t understand how this professor could expect me to ever become a great engineer or design spacecraft if he couldn’t teach me well enough to pass his darn tests.

Learn More

Turkey’s Opposition and Its Global Significance

The efforts of Turkey’s opposition to change the government through elections are not only interesting and important to the Turks and those interested in Turkish politics. These efforts concern all citizens of the world who are looking for ways out of the deepening “democracy crisis” that is likely to worsen along with the global economic crisis.

Learn More

What Undecided PA Swing Voters Are Thinking

From the latest Swing Voter Project focus groups, conducted on October 11 with 13 Trump-to-Biden voters across Pennsylvania, we learned that despite months of campaigning and millions of dollars spent on ads, some are still undecided about whom they will support in these races.

Learn More

The American Chestnut and the Evolution of Conservation

With people transforming landscapes for agriculture, roads, businesses, and homes, introducing species to new places, and changing the global climate, life everywhere is caught in a race just to keep up. The story of the American chestnut is emblematic of this shift, and it’s the subject of a major decision looming in conservation that will have ramifications for decades to come.

Learn More

Money Laundering is Threatening our Communities. Data for Law Enforcement Can Help.

Every day, agents, police, and prosecutors across America are fighting to protect our communities, safeguard U.S. national security and financial markets, and stem the flow of dirty money into the United States. Even so, current safeguards against money laundering still allow a tidal wave of illicit cash into the United States. I should know. I led many of these types of investigations for 20 years.

Learn More

The Metamorphosis of Jerome Powell

For the better part of the year, a battle has been brewing between the Federal Reserve and Wall Street to convince the elite cadre of professional money managers and stock and bond traders that Jerome Powell is the second coming of Paul Volcker. The conversation has been a titanic struggle, with trillions of dollars and Powell’s legacy on the line.

Learn More

In Iran, A New Revolution Is Unfolding

For a multitude of reasons, the unprecedented protests in Iran no longer qualify as uprisings but foretell of a blooming insurgency for secular democracy. For over forty years, Iranian people have endured a number of now high-profile massacres, yet the free world has by and large viewed these atrocities through the lens of ambivalence.

Learn More

It’s Time for a Criminal Investigation of Boeing’s CEOs

After a series of airline crashes, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has imposed $201 million in fines against Boeing and its CEO for misleading investors about the safety of the planes involved. However, there is still a need for criminal investigations into Boeing CEOs Dennis Muilenburg and David Calhoun.

Learn More

The Unusual Settlement of Alec Baldwin

The terms of the settlement may have been surprising to some. Hutchins will now apparently be an executive producer, and work to complete and release the film. But, the fact that the parties have settled is not. Not in light of recent events.

Learn More

What Cybersecurity Can Teach Us About Defending Democracy

The loudest voices can oftentimes control the national megaphones, even wishing to curtail our liberties under the guise of saving them. Cybersecurity expert, Nick Espinosa, explains why defending ourselves against the suspension of rights is best understood through the lens of how we approach cybersecurity.

Learn More

Football and the Midterms

The midterm political football continues to bounce. We’ve had so many last-minute factors in past elections: the 2008 economic crash and Barack Obama, Anthony Weiner’s laptop and 2016 — or Hunter Biden’s laptop — or even the timing of the release of the Covid vaccines. We still have no idea what last minute bounce the ball could still take in the 44 days between now and November 8.

Learn More

Quarterbacks and Mermaids, Books and Migrants

Dr. Michael Gavin, author and President of Delta College describes the blurred lines between white fantasy and reality, while the imagined and physical borders for our own citizens are being drawn more rigidly to oppress non-whites, women, and LGBTQ+ people.

Learn More

We Haven’t Yet Solved Our Semiconductor Dilemma

While the CHIPS and Science Act will bolster U.S. semiconductor production and make critical investments in domestic production of modern technology, Russia’s war on Ukraine has squeezed the market for rare gases that are vital to this production – highlighting our continued vulnerability in an unstable world.

Learn More

Three Ways to Spot Opioid Dependency

Opioid addiction is on the rise around the world. Most people know someone who is struggling with opioid dependency, but we might not realize it. If you are concerned that your friend or a loved one has been affected, there are certain signs you can look for.

Learn More

Emotion in American Political Rhetoric

While there are obvious cases where extremist rhetoric aroused strong emotions and violence, the view that rhetoric producing a passionate response is inherently dangerous may also be, misguided. Fortunately, there is a means of distinguishing between forms of rhetoric producing reactions that are dangerous and those that are forces for societal reform.

Learn More

Another “Hand-Out”

There is no shame in pursuing an alternative higher education. Ira H. Schoen is a firm believer that every school district should provide both a trade school and one that’s academic-oriented— further exploring why parents and students should carefully consider whether a private university is actually of less value than a public one.

Learn More

Rules of Civility in a Sometimes-Uncivilized World

Divisive politicians. Shouting TV pundits. Mean-spirited social media trolls. Are you concerned about the decline in civility? As Former Congressman, Ric Keller, explains it’s not too late to turn things around even if we fear America being ripped apart by divisive leaders and talking heads, we just need to follow these simple rules.

Learn More

Ordinary Republican

Returning content contributor and 34-year veteran truck driver, Jeff Clark, explains why he — a self-proclaimed “ordinary Republican” — is frustrated by his government, as he observes both parties drifting too far into extremism.

Learn More

Continuing Resolutions

Imagine sitting down with your partner/spouse to discuss next year’s finances, and you agree on everything except one purchase—there is just no budging for either of you! Welcome to the world of federal government spending. The way Congress funds the government is a mess, so to ensure it does not shut down, they increasingly rely on a stop-gap measure — Continuing Resolutions.

Learn More

Midterm Elections 2022: “It’s AGED+, Stupid”

In the 1992 presidential election, Bill Clinton’s strategist, James Carville, famously coined the phrase, “It’s the economy, stupid.” As of early September 2022, it’s looking like “It’s AGED+, stupid.” That’s not seniors taking over— it’s an acronym for Abortion, Guns, Environment, Democracy, and +.

Learn More

To the Midterms and Beyond: Bridging the Political Chasm

The 2022 mid-term elections are less than 90 days away. The decidedly pro-choice abortion vote in Kansas is a more enduring bellwether of what’s happening across America. Fading ardor for Trump, declining support for Trumpists, and growing rejection of Trumpism, suggest a November surprise may be brewing.

Learn More

The Security Woes of Former President Trump

While leaders, oftentimes, demand flexibility in their use of technology, this can be problematic for their security personnel. In light of the recent events at Mar-a-Lago, cybersecurity expert Nick Espinosa, puts into context the multitude of security issues that former President Trump brought to the table during his time in office.

Learn More

November Red Wave: The Problem with Midterm Predictions

For almost a year the media and handicappers have predicted that, in November, a massive red wave will sweep Republicans into office, even in blue states and districts. But, these predictions have ignored three key factors that might make the 2022 midterm elections different from past.

Learn More

With Our Help the Kids Will Be Alright

A recent poll highlighted how college students disassociate from peers with opposing political opinions. Dr. Nathan Shrader, an associate professor of political science at NEC, analyzed this phenomenon through a modern lens: “I wouldn’t expect them to have the feelings I did of my peers whom I disagreed with twenty years ago because the disagreements—and what we disagreed about—have changed so very much.”

Learn More

Are the Police Criminally Liable for Failure to Render Aid?

The last few chapters of the arrest and death of George Floyd unfolded recently with federal prison sentences for every officer on the scene for crimes including failure to provide medical aid, and failure to intervene Chauvin. The next test the justice system is facing is if it will apply the federal precedent in similar cases. Joe Tamburino, a leading criminal defense attorney in Minneapolis, explains how the DOJ is, so far, failing that test.

Learn More

A Bipartisan Call for the General Assembly to Get Charter Reform Legislation Across the Finish Line

Despite bipartisan calls for comprehensive charter school reform, the PA General Assembly has, once again, put this year’s budget to bed without any significant reforms to the charter school law—widely recognized as one of the worst in the country. Long-time public servants, Robert Gleason and Eugene DePasquale, express their disappointment with the continued inaction by their state legislature. Their message to policymakers: it’s time for reform!

Learn More

The Bubble at the High School Level

Pedro Vega, a high school social studies teacher from New York, has always appreciated the articulate discussions of his students. However, in recent years, he’s noticed that they’ve been more reluctant to openly share and discuss their views on politics. It’s not that they don’t have opinions, as Vega explains, they are afraid of being ostracized in front of others— fearing being called racist, intolerant, fascist, or woke.

Learn More

How Carried Interest Can Help Restore Exceptionalism, Economic Participation, And the American Dream

Some lawmakers believe that carried interest has become a financial burden on American society as it misaligns rewards for the wealthy, inhibits risk, reduces competitiveness, and penalizes the American workforce. Supporters, on the other hand, argue that the carried interest tax law incentivizes long term investments and increases and more efficiently distributes the country’s wealth. Robert Goldberg, an entrepreneur and investor, argues that both are wrong.

Learn More

A Combat Veteran’s Perspective on the Defeat of Liz Cheney

Liz Cheney being defeated in her primary in a resounding thirty-point landslide has cultivated no shortage of reactions. But one proverbial collective sigh of relief came from an often-overlooked community when talking politics: combat veterans of Iraq, Afghanistan, and other theaters of the “Global War on Terrorism”.

Learn More

Is Quitting the Cure for Burnout?

After years of facing a global health crisis, the workforce was collectively exhausted. As the labor shortage continues to rise, companies have responded by wooing recruits with perks and pay. But new data shows that more pay is not the solution for burnout. Award-winning journalist and author, Jennifer Moss lays out everything you need to know before you decide to make your job work, or if quitting is the cure for your burnout.

Learn More

Top Secret

In the wake of the FBI’s search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, Robert Kelly, a retired Coast Guard Reserve Captain who served in the White House for Presidents Reagan and Bush, reflects on his own handling of classified information. He explains the standard protocols surrounding secret material, and why he and so many of his former colleagues are, “sickened by seeing so many of the people’s elected representatives acting in such an irresponsible manner.”

Learn More

Do Smartphones Have Us Evolving in Reverse?

When we assign key functions of our brain to be performed by a smartphone, are we not devolving? PJ DiMuzio, co-founder of Creative Outfit, chronicles the year that he chose to protect his mind by unplugging it; ditching his smartphone– despite working in digital production– so that he could reconstruct his relationships, memory, focus, and business.

Learn More

Die Before You Die

There is an ancient inscription carved above the door of St. Paul’s Monastery located on the secluded Mount Athos peninsula in Macedonia, Northern Greece. It reads: If you die before you die, you won’t die when you die. Allow me to dissect the metaphysical maxim into two segments via an experiential self-inquiry to better help clarify the head-scratching questions that are potentially arising in your voice-in-the-head at this very moment.

Learn More

Should the Desalinization of Seawater Be a National Priority?

Persistent drought in the Western U.S. has the potential of becoming a national security crisis of catastrophic proportions. Given that the interruption of such a large portion of the nation’s food production may potentially be at stake, one might consider the desalinization of seawater, notably agriculture production, to be a national priority of the highest order. Yet it is rarely discussed in our national political discourse with any kind of urgency.

Learn More

Swing Voters Accepting of Trans People, Not Trans Policy Agenda

All of us have witnessed in recent years the growing visibility of trans and non-binary people in American culture and life. Rich Thau, president of Engagious Inc., conducted a pair of focus groups to explore what swing voters make of this evolution, especially with so many younger people, in particular, identifying as either trans or non-binary.

Learn More

Lessons We Learned for Improving Healthcare and the World

Alfred and Blair Sadler, authors and identical twin brothers, once served as a medical-legal team ushering in several large-scale shifts in the practice and delivery of healthcare services in the United States. In this piece, they reflect on what they have learned over the course of their careers, and how it’s shaped their perspectives on today’s polarized political landscape.

Learn More

Democracy Presses Us to Judge for Today, Not Yesterday

“The Constitution of the United States lets us consider who we are today. It does not limit us to who we were centuries ago…” John J. Hamill, a Chicago-based trial lawyer, examines how constitutional rights are being reinterpreted as the concept of “originalism” is becoming more popular within public discourse.

Learn More

Investigating an Insurrection

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney, Malcolm Lazin, examines the aftermath of the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, and the subsequent hearing of the U.S. House Select Committee, through the lens of criminal prosecution. “As a former federal prosecutor who led investigations into white-collar crime, official corruption, and organized crime—methodically working up the chain and convicting underlings is underappreciated.”

Learn More

What If We Just Accept Violence As the New Normal?

In the examination of concerns related to violence, is there a priority? Mass shootings, suicides, domestic/family conflicts, deadly encounters with law enforcement, and uncontrollable protests are all setting new records. In this analysis, Dr. Don Clardy, a tenured professor at Baker University, focuses on violence associated with Anti-Semitism, which has persisted for more than 100 years, has led to the deaths of millions, and continues to show malignant growth.

Learn More

Creating Resilient Supply Chains Requires a ‘Security’ Mindset

It is no longer sufficient to design supply chains that are timely and cost-effective. As we learned over the past two years, resilience is paramount and making supply chains resilient demands a new management paradigm.  One of the most effective models to compare in this context is air travel and how the TSA conducts airport security because how it centers on providing security to the human supply chain.

Learn More

To Unite America, Get Back to the Office!

The workplace is yet another opportunity for fostering friendships of the type that lift the poor out of poverty — and bridge our political divide — but not when practiced over a Zoom call. New data has found that bringing people together is not enough on its own; relationships must be forged. They won’t be — if we are only connected by ethernet.

Learn More

Education: A Value that Unites Us?

It is somewhat of an oxymoron to suggest that educational institutions have the potential to resolve our fractured political and social issues which have polarized America into distinct ideological camps. Parental rights, curriculum content, gender identification, and school admission practices have many leaders failing to see “the forest for the trees.”

Learn More

The 3D-Printed Genie

With gun violence on the rise, and politicians working to put more limitations on firearms, another looming threat is being overlooked by legislators. Author and manufacturing consultant, Kip Hanson explores how ignoring the capabilities of 3D printers could be a danger to public safety.

Learn More

Missouri Republicans Open to Immigration Bills Affecting Millions

With a week to go before the primary, we wanted to understand how undecided Republicans in the state view not only that election, but a few key issues. While both inflation and the Second Amendment were top concerns for the 13 voters we interviewed in a pair of focus groups on July 26, we probed on another issue that matters to them: immigration.

Learn More

FARA Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means

The Foreign Agents Registration Act was passed in the Fall of 1938. Though FARA’s original purpose was largely to ferret out foreign government propagandists, the term “foreign principal” also includes foreign corporations, individuals, and associations. Joshua Ian Rosenstein, Member of Sandler Reiff Lamb Rosenstein & Birkenstock, P.C, explains that FARA is much broader than is commonly understood, as it covers more than just lobbying, instead regulating “political activities.”

Learn More

Primary Elections Are Under Attack

The 2022 primary season has seen many twists and turns, upsets, medical emergencies, shocking TV ads, and scandals- but one feature of the 2022 primaries has received no attention: the emerging effort being led by Trump-aligned legislators to prevent millions of Americans from voting in primaries at all.

Learn More

Are Demographics Still Destiny?

In January of 2008, the Pew Research Center released a report that said: “if current trends continue, the demographic profile of the United States will change dramatically by the middle of this century.” This was widely interpreted to be good news for one party; Demographics are the democrats’ best friend, or so thought many…

Learn More

Why The Media Is to Blame for Lax Gun Control Laws

While media outlets are more than willing to show images of carnage during their reports on war and combat zones, they’re too afraid to show those needlessly gunned down throughout America. Why are there two different standards applied to the same human suffering when the shock of these images could help advance effective gun control measures into law?

Learn More

Dispatch From Ukraine

Irwin and Karen Redlener, co-founders of the Ukraine Children’s Action Project, report on their most recent visit to the war-torn country, where they met with children, teachers, doctors, and government officials— introducing a plan that would help the children of Ukraine navigate the upcoming school year within their calamitous situation.

Learn More

Is America Really Losing Out to China?

A major 2021 poll found that the largest portion of Americans surveyed believe that China is economically stronger than the United States, but is America really losing out to China? And if it is, what does that mean for tackling global challenges like climate change without Beijing?

Learn More

Wisconsin Swing Voters Describe Inflation’s Daily Toll

There’s been a lot of talk about how 9% inflation has become Americans’ top concern, but far less discussion about how high gas prices, for example, are affecting day-to-day lives, especially over the summer travel period. Rich Thau and Jill Ditommaso asked 14 Wisconsin swing voters—who voted for Trump in 2016 and Biden in 2020—to describe how they are adapting to higher prices.

Learn More

Let’s Stop Playing Whack-a-Mole

Our politicians’ failure to expose the common origin of many national issues may illustrate why liberals, Democrats, independents, and some Republicans are now politically impotent against a tide of political, social, educational, and juridical crises. Dr. Michael H. Gavin, author and President of Delta College, identifies that origin as The New White Nationalism.

Learn More

The Army of Lobbyists Behind the Ukraine War

After Russia invaded Ukraine, we learned that the U.S. responded with sanctions for Russia and humanitarian and military support to Ukraine. Though Ben Freeman, a Research Fellow at the Quincy Institute, reveals that most Americans don’t know that there was another battle being waged by a force as powerful in American politics as an army is on the battlefield: lobbyists.

Learn More

How Sustainable Investing Became Another Greenwashing Ploy

A look into recent investment trends reveals a move among socially-conscious investors to screen potential ventures by environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria. While these investors may be well-intentioned, the ESG criteria are misleading due to faulty algorithms, and they do not represent what the public generally believes sustainable investing is. Instead, conscious investors should seek alternative investment methods to ensure that their sustainability efforts are not made in vain.

Learn More

A National Nervous Breakdown?

I’ve been off for two weeks on account of a family visit to Italy. It was a time to relax — and also, to reflect. The trip was one part pure vacation; the other a roots tour.

Learn More

How We Are Wrong About Undocumented Immigrants

Reducing our negative biases towards undocumented immigrants is possible. It starts with holding the media and politicians accountable for misleading information about undocumented immigrants and acknowledging that undocumented immigrants who seek asylum are here legally.

Learn More

8.6 vs. January 6

It’s 8.6 versus January 6. Two stories are competing for our attention. Both are important, and related. One spares no victims and threatens our wallets, the other – for those paying attention – is exposing an unprecedented attack on our system of government.

Learn More

Which Child’s Life is Worth Protecting?

To me, the argument that restrictive abortion laws are about protecting the sanctity of life rings very hollowly because, in the next breath, lawmakers find every excuse to argue why they can’t pass laws to minimize the likelihood of our children being slaughtered at school.

Learn More

How Silicon Valley Will Help Criminalize Abortions

Fertility and women’s health apps do not fall under HIPAA compliance and have been known to data data-mine their users typically without their knowledge as studies show that virtually no one reads the End User License Agreements that are often times convoluted and vague.

Learn More

Should Biden LBJ It?

We could debate whether any one of these items is truly the “fault” of the president. But the reality is that they are all unfolding on his watch.

Learn More

Pennsylvania: My Primary Concern

For months I’ve said all eyes across the country should be on the Pennsylvania primary elections. And while I knew things would get interesting, I never envisioned the many twists and turns in the home stretch.

Learn More

Will Abortion Redefine the 2022 Elections?

While the demise of Roe v. Wade will no doubt constitute a tsunami-sized political event, it may not matter much in 2022. The hill Democrats have to climb is far too steep, and even a complete dismantling of Roe would not offset their current political liabilities.

Learn More

Has Anyone Thought About the Chief?

The Chief has a firm view of where the Third Branch should fit within our system of government, and he spent his entire tenure ensuring that the prestige and reputation of his court remain protected.

Learn More

What If An Afterlife Was Taken Off the Table?

During a Sunday school class, the two of us – a retired preacher and a professor – enjoyed spirited discussions on faith when the topic turned to the concept of an afterlife and the extent to which personal beliefs may steer our actions.

Learn More

Ukraine: It’s Strictly Personal

It’s human nature to empathize with people who experience natural disasters, accidents, or war, but because our TV screens are constantly flooded with such images for so long, many people have simply grown immune. But for me, it’s more personal.

Learn More

The Color of Musk

Like everything else around us, Musk just became subject to our partisan divide. His interest in acquiring Twitter now being heralded on the Right and greeted with trepidation on the Left.

Learn More

Pandemic Politics

Here’s what’s missing: consistency. If you think the pandemic conditions no longer warrant slowing immigration, then it follows that student loan payments can also return to normal.

Learn More

Life Imitates Art

Yes, the story is fictional. But it is nevertheless insightful as to the country in which it is set and the man who leads it.

Learn More

Ukrainian Neutrality is a Three-Way Game

The progress on the intellectual and diplomatic front in Moscow, Kyiv, and Washington is good news because a neutrality agreement for Ukraine is really the only alternative to a protracted and bloody war of attrition like that of Afghanistan.

Learn More

World War III Started Online Years Ago

With the Internet being as indispensable as it is for the global economy, communications, governments, and societal stability, it’s time to fully understand that an attack on technological infrastructure can be just as devasting in its own way for a country.

Learn More

The Case for the Kyiv Airlift

To those who assert that a Kyiv Airlift might start WWIII, should Russia emerge victorious Putin will be both enriched and emboldened to undergo a larger invasion of Europe and former Soviet satellite states.

Learn More

Pennsylvania is Ready for Victoria’s Law.

If consumers had more options and transparency around the breeding and sale of pets, that would reduce demand and reform such a cruel industry. It’s not so far-fetched and there is a solution on the table in Pennsylvania called “Victoria’s Law.”

Learn More

A Spartacus Moment

The only way to thwart Russian aggression is by offensive action by the U.S. and NATO. But twenty years post-9/11, Americans are fatigued by war in distant lands.

Learn More

Stop the Silent Book Banning

Across the nation, there is a culture move to ban literature in our school system – from texts featuring miscarriages to discussions of mental health and suicide. It is one of the most un-American movements of my lifetime.

Learn More

A Roadmap to COVID-19 Endemicity in Schools

In as little as a couple of weeks in many parts of the US, COVID-19 will be at low levels similar to most endemic respiratory viruses. Unless a new variant appears, the time is now to change how we manage our approach to the virus.

Learn More

Sarah Palin’s Meal Plan

I thought it was reckless for Palin to interact with others in a public space while having COVID. Not just because of the risk of contaminating others. I mean reckless in a legal sense.

Learn More

Swing Voters Ready for the COVID Endemic

President Biden campaigned on his promise to “shut down the virus,” but as he completes his first year in office, swing voters we interviewed on January 11th are ready for a new strategy—one that recognizes the virus is here to stay.

Learn More

Will Biden Bounce Back?

While some of the vexing issues are arguably beyond a president’s control, many were missteps. Not the sort of thing you’d expect from a Washington lifer who campaigned as seasoned and experienced. 

Learn More

Apathy Is How Democracy Dies

Hyper-partisanship and apathy. These are the two biggest forces keeping us from unlocking the full potential of America and staving off any further dalliance with authoritarianism.

Learn More

Finally, Good News Comes with COVID

A trifecta of good news came on Wednesday. There’s this potentially game-changing COVID pill from Pfizer, studies proving omicron to be less deadly than delta, and a surprising moment of harmony from Trump and Biden.

Learn More

All Politics Is Personal

There is a difference between policies that poll well and policies that get voters to the polls, although journalists, pundits, and even politicians broadly confuse the two.

Learn More

How Conservatives on the Supreme Court Are Wrong on Abortion

The conservative majority of the Supreme Court is not “pro-life”, they are “pro-birth”. Their questioning clearly exhibited an improper understanding of the medicine and science required to ensure the life and wellbeing of a woman who would have to endure a potentially dangerous, life-compromising pregnancy.

Learn More

Wouldn’t Work, and Won’t Be Tried.

Buried in the reporting about Germany’s lock-down limiting the activities of the unvaccinated was this pretty significant caveat: The ban does not apply to those who have recently recovered from COVID-19.

Learn More

What’s It Worth?

What’s the per-person value of those civil suits pending against the United States government for the separation of immigrant families on President Trump’s watch?

Learn More

Should Police Shoot to Incapacitate?

It is now widely agreed that the preservation of human life should be the highest priority in policing. On that basis alone, we should avoid reflexively dismissing the “shoot to incapacitate” approach.

Learn More

The Evangelical Church’s Catechesis Failure

We are seeing a massive “catechesis” failure – or, in other words, a failure in religious instruction. The Evangelical church in the U.S. over the last five decades has failed to form its adherents into disciples. So, a great hollowness developed.

Learn More

Why America Will Unite or Die

Today, the most dangerous threat to our democracy comes not from a foreign adversary but from within, as the radical right ascends in the Republican Party and the radical left gains strength in the Democratic Party.

Learn More

“Fixing” Facebook Doesn’t Fix the Damage Its Done

In what is perhaps the most unknowing coalition the world has ever seen, psychologists, privacy advocates, cybersecurity experts, comedians, world leaders and even one of the founders of the world wide web have been sounding the alarm for years on serious harm social media has done to the fabric of society and democracies around the planet.

Learn More

The Democrats’ Debt Dilemma

As we head into October and lurch toward the end of the first session of the 117th Congress, the Democratic Leadership and President Biden face a terrifying trifecta of goals.

Learn More

The Thing About Manchin and Sinema

It’s been a roller coaster of a week in Washington as Democrats tried to advance a 1.2 trillion dollar infrastructure bill. But when all was said and done, Democrats failed to vote on the infrastructure bill intended to be Biden’s hallmark legislation. Are Senators Manchin and Sinema the problem, or the solution?

Learn More

Afghanistan In Three Words

So damn sad. That’s the one and maybe only observation on which we can all agree about the suicide bombing outside Kabul airport Thursday that killed 13 U.S. Servicemen among more than 170 people – with another 200-plus wounded.

Learn More

Was It All In Vain?

To the extent mistakes were made – and they were – that doesn’t bear on service and sacrifice of those who were boots on the ground.

Learn More

Climate Change: Who Will Lead the Way?

The clock is ticking. We need to face the challenges of addressing our changing climate. The phony “debate” about the science needs to be transformed into a real debate about the solutions and supporting timely actions.

Learn More

The Battle for Science in Bucks County

Despite their sometimes-glossy public facade, and blandly positive names – like “Reopen Bucks” or “Keeping Kids in School” – they espouse a virulent disregard of science, medicine, inclusion, and people’s lived experiences other than their own.

Learn More

How to Undermine Public Health

We are not yet at the point where Republican leaders are pressuring voters and public health officials to withdraw from all public health efforts, and hopefully, that moment will not arrive.

Learn More

It’s Time to Change the Delta on the Delta.

As the United States is entering the third wave of COVID-19, the facts of where we are and where we’re going are clear. Equally clear is that course corrections can save lives while preserving political freedoms and economic recovery.

Learn More

Israel After Netanyahu: Anchored in a One-State Reality

In the long run, the emergence of this government in Israel highlights two principles:   that politics makes strange bedfellows and that even very partial democracies, if they feature intense partisan competition, can make progress toward building a more inclusive and reasonable society.

Learn More

A Hidden Public Health Crisis

Even as Americans are more aware of public health issues than ever before, this condition affects millions of women, especially pregnant ones, and it has generational implications for their offspring.

Learn More

HR.1 Is Very Much Alive

No major piece of legislation’s path to victory is without turbulence, and the For the People Act is no different. It’s par for the course in our bicameral system, where many competing interests weigh in as Congress considers a bill.

Learn More

Can $15 an Hour Solve the Problem of Poverty?

Today, few remnants of the Great Society’s aspirational goals emphasize self-support and human dignity. Instead, welfare’s present form provides material support – transferring resources to help individuals obtain goods and services they cannot purchase independently.

Learn More

Bring Home Danny Fenster, Our Son

For us, this is about our son, the kid we raised, the kid we love beyond words. We also appreciate that his detainment is about the importance of a free press and the role it plays in a democracy – both at home and abroad.

Learn More

A Tale of Two Theories

I’ve spent several days on the radio this week discussing the latest revelations concerning the origin of COVID-19. A number of callers asked a question that I find absurd and it is this: “Who cares?”

Learn More

All Rise for the Mid-Terms

There remains another midterm intangible that cannot be avoided by either party. Two cases will be heard this fall by the Supreme Court – which has been reshaped by three, Trump-nominated Justices.

Learn More

Why the Recall Election Could Be a Boon for Gov. Newsom

Thanks to California’s election laws, an avalanche of candidates have stepped forward to potentially replace the governor – most notably, the transgender, former Olympian Caitlyn Jenner. Well, if history is a teacher, those who backed the recall may have just given Governor Newsom a golden political opportunity.

Learn More

Let’s Make Local Office Non-Partisan

Traditional political wisdom says that voters tend to look for “someone like me” and vote accordingly. Today, the level of political self-sorting has increased to the point that political affiliations are valued more by voters than experience.

Learn More

The Fight That Could End the Filibuster

With no prospect of bipartisan legislating on the horizon, a fight on the filibuster is coming. As such, Democrats need to find a hill to fight on: an issue that will give them the best chance of busting open this archaic procedure.

Learn More

Why I Am No Longer Vaccine Hesitant

I do not regret my vaccine hesitancy, but I also do not regret my decision to finally get the vaccine based on the available science and data. As so many others have said, getting a vaccine is not just about you, but about the safety of our own communities.

Learn More

A Case For Cameras

The trial of Derek Chauvin was vindication for cameras in American courtrooms. Not since the OJ Simpson Criminal Trial in 1995 have so many Americans gathered around televisions to watch the administration of justice.

Learn More

Know Thyself

Just imagine for a moment if we all recognized the true essence of our Self; if we deeply adhered to the prophetic prescription to ‘Know Thyself’.

Learn More

Kamala Harris: Where Have You Been?

Why the sudden change in course for America’s first female vice president? Though just shy of her first three months in office, speculation and finger-pointing are already playing out in the Beltway.

Learn More

What Is American Cuisine?

Recent years have been revolutionary times for American cuisine, as chefs creatively explore the roots of our common foods and expand their interpretations of them. This raises the question: What cuisine will be the next to entice so many of us that it becomes part of our national menu?

Learn More

Can Prison Become a College Campus?

The Biden administration and state governments need to expand advanced workforce skills programs behind bars. If we do not invest in technology and training, we will continue to see dismally high recidivism rates for the hundreds of thousands of citizens who return to society from prison.

Learn More

America’s Leverage with Beijing

Global legitimacy is a powerful and specific form of leverage that China yearns for. Leveraging it may be able to provide enough diplomatic pressure to grant us concessions in a number of ongoing issues.

Learn More

The Fraud in Analyzing Voter Fraud

If you believe that postal workers are theoretically bribable, that fake ballots and envelopes are theoretically printable, and that voters are theoretically targetable, then you understand the weaknesses built into our vote-by-mail (VBM) system.

Learn More

In the Wake of an Insurrection

The Capitol is covered in scaffolding as if they are a series of scars reminding us of the seditious assault on the temple of our Democracy on January 6th. When they are gone, we cannot – and should not – put January 6th in our rearview mirror.

Learn More

A Conscience Can Sometimes Be a Pest

There’s a certain type of person who voted for Barack Obama in 2012 and Donald Trump in 2016. There’s also a different—and equally fascinating type—who voted for Trump in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020.

Learn More

Your DNA Is the Next Frontier Of Data Privacy

It’s exciting to find a long-lost family or a relative and can be a relief to know that a propensity for cancer doesn’t run in the family. However, most don’t realize the risks associated with giving away what is uniquely yours to a for-profit corporation.

Learn More

We Need a Bipartisan Commission to Investigate Our Pandemic Response

As society begins to return to the so-called “new normal,” we must do everything we can to learn from this collective trauma. As such, I think a bipartisan 9/11-style commission must convene to look back on the pandemic, investigate any instances of government mismanagement, and propose a set of recommendations to prevent this mess from happening again.

Learn More

A Case to Bring Back Earmarks

Frankly, the tired anecdote of people in orange vests leaning against shovels and bridges to nowhere is not supported by data. The more we complain about earmarks, the faster our local infrastructure crumbles.

Learn More

College Admissions is Broken. This Year Shows Why.

The admissions process has always been a one-sided affair with colleges holding more of the cards; this year it promises to be even worse with the specter of the pandemic. So, maybe this is the perfect time to rethink some of the traditions of admissions.  

Learn More

From Raiders to Researchers

We knew we needed to push this through the right channels and see if somehow, someway, medical cannabis could make it into the Veterans Health Administration. Could this be a viable alternative to opiates that are being prescribed? How could we even make the case?

Learn More

The Strength of Empathetic Leadership

Whatever your opinion of Biden, know this: He has empathy. Biden, who has a deep history of personal loss and grief, called upon his own hardships to provide a much-needed salve to a nation plagued by unrelenting loss.

Learn More

Donald Trump: A Golden Calf, A False Idol

This camouflage-wearing, gun touting bigots, once the underbelly of our society, have been whipped up and empowered by Trump’s ire. They are a threat to our democracy and have committed violence in various other cities.

Learn More

The Party of My Father

I wonder what happened to the party of Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Reagan, Dirksen, McCain, and the Bushes. Today’s GOP is a shadow of its former self and continues to cleave to an orthodoxy of simple blind loyalty to one man and to his intractable base.

Learn More

Free Speech Can’t ‘Cancel’ Truth

The right to free speech does not ‘cancel’ our societal right to truth. We have all lost family members and or friends due to what I would call mostly non-violent radicalization from social media misinformation. The truth is their beliefs and actions are a form of self-cancelation and only they can undo this form of self-harm. 

Learn More

A Realistic Path to Police Reform

This week begins the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin for his role in the death of George Floyd.  As the trial unfolds, the public will once again discuss a myriad of ways to reform police departments, debating everything from “defunding the police” to banning chokeholds.

Learn More

The Role of Collective Power in Democracy

As the public relations officer and assistant to the superintendent and board of education in a suburban Chicago school district, I have a bird’s eye view of the collective power of the local teachers’ union as our nation prepares to open our schools.

Learn More

Abbott’s Call to Open Texas Is Irresponsible

While I am sympathetic to the economic fallout of the virus, I believe that public health and safety need to be prioritized. Our state is continuing to grapple with the fallout of an unprecedented winter storm, and to me, Abbott’s decision is both reckless and irresponsible.

Learn More

Moving Past the Parliamentarian

The parliamentarian’s determination not only dealt a decisive blow to Biden’s short-term economic agenda but also set new limits on how the Democrat-controlled Senate will be able to pass their most ambitious policies moving forward.

Learn More

Why Nuclear Decisions Must Remain With the President Alone

I believe that vesting the decision to use nuclear weapons in one person is the correct answer. President Truman’s “he alone” intonation gives you every sentiment you need to understand why. This decision is so intimate for the President that it will never be used in a reckless or spasmatic way.

Learn More

Is $1.9 Trillion the Price of Unity?

A trillion dollars is apparently a bridge too far for those ten Republicans. They were all for unity, but unity comes at a price. If unity is what Joe Biden wants, apparently he needs to take things down a bit. Into the billions, preferably. 

Learn More

Normalcy Is Not For Everyone

Tomorrow in Orlando, former President Trump will address the Conservative Political Action Conference (or “CPAC”). It’s an event that could offer an early window into the party’s 2024 presidential contest.

Learn More

Economic Justice Will Unite Our Country

The government, in collaboration with the business sector, has an unprecedented opportunity of addressing the legitimate grievances of tens-of-millions of Americans, bringing greater income and social equality to those sections of the county that have been most impacted by industrial decline.  

Learn More

Why the Price of Bitcoin Stays Artificially Inflated

Bitcoin (BTC) has no intrinsic value. It can’t because it doesn’t actually exist. So, why then has the price of BTC increased over 15,000 percent in just the past 5 years from $350 to over $55,000? To explain this, it is necessary to understand how Bitcoin came to exist and how cryptocurrency works.

Learn More

Beyond 8 Minutes and 46 Seconds

The light of our collective conscience is shining brightly on the insidious nature of racism, especially in our law enforcement. The time is at hand to face the consequences of unbridled bigotry openly and honestly. It may be impossible to legislate tolerance and compassion, but we must nevertheless pursue justice.

Learn More

Texas, Stop the Act. Start the Action

You want to know what caused this? Blame the ‘Texas Strong, Texas Proud, Texas Independent’ acts of machismo that too many subscribe to in this state. Instead of basic blocking and tackling, many spearheading our response are preening and strutting.

Learn More

Rush To Judgement

I didn’t know Rush Limbaugh personally, I was in his company just one night, but he had an enormous impact on my profession and our nation. News of his passing has been met with as divided a reaction as his work while alive. But Rush’s legacy is more complicated than any caricature.

Learn More

Hold Your Rocks, America

I could fill up my time scrolling through my Twitter, happily watching the Internet flay Cruz for his stupidity. He’s a tempting emotional punching bag. But what will this public condemnation accomplish?

Learn More

Admit It, Senator Cruz

What he has done by going to Cancun in the middle of this humanitarian is literally indefensible. Morally. Politically. In any possible way of looking at it.  Indefensible.

Learn More

Creativity is Not a Luxury

Ten years ago, if your organization was not a tech company in some form, then you were in trouble. Today, if you’re not a creative company – no matter your sector – then watch out.

Learn More

Rush Limbaugh’s America

Whether you loved him or hated him, recognize that no one had more impact in shaping where we are both politically, and in terms of the media we consume, than Rush Hudson Limbaugh III.

Learn More

Trump’s ‘Big Lie’ Remains his Greatest Crime

Now, as we have seen the ease with which public opinion can be manipulated by social media and the news-entertainment complex, and a large percentage of one political party convinced of fraud claims made up out of whole cloth, the frail underbelly of our democracy has been exposed.

Learn More

Hitting Rock Bottom

Throughout the past four years, I have repeatedly believed that, following each of Trump’s many dreadful misdeeds, that the party could not possibly sink any lower.  Every time, I was proven wrong.

Learn More

President’s Day Quiz

Which U.S. president was born in a log cabin, raised in the backwoods, became a lawyer, served in his state legislature and Congress, foiled Southern led gutting of the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, opposed slavery, and was an ardent Unionist?

Learn More

What Lawmakers Can Learn from Mobsters

After a decade of research, we believe that lawmakers should step back and study how mobsters take the long view and push decision-making at the local level; most importantly, they should examine how mobsters employ incentive schemes that motivate and contribute to America’s endless fascination with their very existence.

Learn More

The Education Conundrum

If closing was so universal, and officials on both sides of the aisle are calling for opening, why is restarting school so hard? As someone in education for 25 years, allow me to offer some thoughts.

Learn More

Is Trump’s “Late Impeachment” Legal?

They make a principle argument that the Constitution “requires that a person actually hold office to be impeached.” Since Donald Trump is no longer President, his attorneys claim “the present proceedings are moot and thus a nullity.”

Learn More

A Takedown of Trump’s Two Impeachment Defenses

Former President Trump main defense at the upcoming second impeachment trial will be that the Senate lacks jurisdiction to try him because he is no longer in office. Any senator who hides behind that argument to avoid passing judgment on the merits is craven and derelict.

Learn More

GOP Buyer’s Remorse

The electoral college challenge and Cheney leadership votes are inconsistent. Think about it. You can’t believe the election was “rigged,” but also want to protect Liz Cheney for her vote to impeach.

Learn More

Fear and Retribution

As the nation now prepares for another impeachment trial, the immediate call for one of these democracy reform priorities is pressing.  Open primaries, in which candidates must face all registered voters instead of only their registered partisan voters, must be adopted nationwide.

Learn More

The Time Has Come for a Value Added Tax

We need the VAT now and I hope the Biden administration will make it a priority to study it. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), a VAT of 5% would raise roughly $300 billion a year, an amount we will need to start closing the budget gap.

Learn More

When the Kids Come Home

I don’t need to tell you all downsides of this pandemic. Still, I am clinging to the silver-linings and the time I have been able to spend with my family. All in all, we had a great 2020, who would have thunk?

Learn More

“Trump-Biden” Swing Voters Give GOP a Mulligan

A second chance is what Republicans in Congress will need from voters in 2022 if they want to regain majorities in the House and Senate. And according to most of the swing voters I focus-grouped on January 21—ones who voted for Trump in 2016 then Biden in 2020—they’re willing to give Graham’s and Paul’s Congressional colleagues that chance.

Learn More

Calling Dr. Cowan

Marjorie Taylor Greene really is deplorable. I didn’t like it when Hillary Clinton used the word to describe Trump voters, but in this case, it applies.

Learn More

Reclaiming Patriotism

We need to ask ourselves, how did we allow Trumpism and right-wing radicals to usurp our foundational values to the point of blatant sedition? The answer is complex. It lies in a convoluted fusion of multi-faceted political and socio-economic factors that have plagued our nation for decades.

Learn More

Why Hank Aaron Matters

Hank Aaron was a legend within the game of baseball, no doubt, but his life was significant beyond the game and those who followed him held him in the highest esteem.

Learn More

The Role of Critical Thinking in Democracy

We must examine and educate ourselves, then commit to a rigorous application of critical thinking – adjusting our worldview accordingly. And finally, we must do everything in our power to help our fellow Americans embrace and apply critical thinking to their lives. The future of our democracy depends upon it.

Learn More

Whitewashing History

The “1776 Report” was a transparent White House effort to whitewash history. Free of footnotes, lacking documentation, and unsigned – as well as loose with facts – it was a piece of propaganda insultingly issued on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

Learn More

In the Wake of Trump’s Presidency

President Biden said in his inaugural address that to restore the soul of America requires unity. But that might have to wait while some of the residual issues surrounding his predecessor are sorted out.  

Learn More

Were the Lockdowns a Mistake?

The fact is that one rarely even hears the word “lockdown” in the media anymore, at least as an option for handling the pandemic going forward.  Mask up and social distance, yes; lockdown, no.

Learn More

America Awakens

As Trump’s legacy begins to enter our rearview mirror, many more Americans will wake up to the cynical nature of Trump’s grift, reject his relentless attempts to overturn the results of a legitimate election and condemn his seditious plot against the government itself.

Learn More

Old Hatreds

The lessons we learned after Lincoln’s assassination are important. Booth was merely the most visible symptom of a wide-spread disease in the Confederacy.

Learn More

Impeachment: What Next?

Donald Trump is now the only American president to have been impeached twice. But like Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton, he will not be removed from office.

Learn More

The Day When Democracy Became Possible Once Again

January 6th was a tragic event, but perhaps it will also be a juncture that creates new possibilities. Rather than a herald of our unraveling, it may come to be seen as the moment when the trajectory of the country changed and building a shared commitment to democratic values became possible once again.

Learn More

Slouching Towards Weimar

Following the attack on the Capitol last week, the cowardice and short-sighted craftiness of so many of our politicians is analogous to the behavior of Weimar politicians whom Hitler held in contempt.

Learn More

Donald Trump: A Golden Calf, A False Idol

These camouflage-wearing, gun touting bigots, once the underbelly of our society, have been whipped up and empowered by Trump’s ire. They are a threat to our democracy and have committed violence in various other cities.

Learn More

Epitaph for the Trump Administration

Finally, he did shoot someone on Fifth Avenue, but he might not get away with it. It didn’t have to end this way. He could have protected, even polished, his legacy. But his personality wouldn’t allow it.

Learn More

America is No Longer the Exception

I look back now and cringe at my naivety and self-assured confidence that the pandemonium, violence, disorder, and corruption suffered by the citizens of these nations could never be visited on the United States.  How wrong I was.

Learn More

Coronavirus Vaccine FAQ

In this article, I’ll address the questions I’ve been asked most often about the vaccines. In part two, I’ll give you the background on how we got where we are today.

Learn More

Dying in the Age of COVID-19

In a pandemic-stricken world, many are suddenly grappling with their mortality. Some die suddenly in hospital wards with their loved ones distant and no plan in place once they pass. For those who survive the virus, an alarming number continue to suffer from crippling symptoms that call for long-term medical care.

Learn More

Why I Am ‘Vaccine Hesitant,’ With A Doctor’s Response

The speed that these vaccines were developed has caused many to take pause about their safety and efficacy. These are not people who engage in bogus conspiracy theories or are outright “anti-vax,” but those who have legitimate concerns about political interference or want more information about the science.

Learn More

George Washington’s Worst Nightmare

Trump’s most destructive actions are occurring before our very eyes. Nothing is more harmful – and perhaps more irreparable – than his continuing efforts to undermine public faith in elections themselves.

Learn More

Whose Team Are You On?

We need to stop debating and discussing politics like we do sports. At the same time, the discussion and coverage of sports have to stop dwelling on the politics of the front office and the locker room.

Learn More

Now is the Time to Change Our Election Laws

President Trump is not subverting the Constitution, but he is weaponizing loopholes in it in a manner that undermines its democratic ideals. The fact that this is possible should be sufficient motivation to enact legislation to protect future elections.

Learn More

We Must Restore the American Dream of Homeownership

Of all of Biden’s presidential appointments, Janet Yellen has the monstrous undertaking of putting the economy back on track, protecting small businesses, and safeguarding the financial wellbeing of average Americans. But above all, she must restore the American Dream of homeownership. 

Learn More

Next Steps in the COVID-19 Vaccine

As we slowly make our transition to a more ‘normal’ society, I urge us to discuss the issues surrounding how we implement COVID vaccines. How we conduct ourselves in the coming months can save countless lives.

Learn More

Tell Them Where the Landmines Are

Upon returning to the Pentagon, my boss, a no-nonsense Assistant Secretary of Defense, made sure we had gotten the message from President Bush: we had a duty to the new administration to help them take over this mission. I had to make sure, in a manner of speaking, to “let them know where the landmines are.”

Learn More

The Next Great Party System

The next party system is beginning to take shape, and it is doing so in places that people wouldn’t think to look: amongst socially liberal suburbanites and socially conservative minorities. 

Learn More

A Patriot’s Post-Election Depression

Realizing that he has not won a second term in the White House, President Trump has decided to figuratively burn it to the ground. He will not cooperate in the transition of power to a new administration, and he is intent on making the work of the next president as difficult as possible.

Learn More

A COVID-19 Vaccine, Explained

While preliminary data for vaccine effectiveness is promising, the reality is that we will be dealing with the menace of COVID-19 for the foreseeable future. It takes time for a population to achieve this vaccine-acquired herd immunity. There will inevitably be hiccups in vaccine distribution.

Learn More

The Road to Lasting Peace in South Sudan

The people of Sudan are making significant strides to achieve peace and security. Still, will international promises and domestic commitments be enough to pull this fragile country out of a decades-long freefall of conflict and instability?

Learn More

How Do We Fix Online Nonsense?

Only one ‘Term of Service Agreement’ is truly needed in my view: You are responsible for anything you post. That’s it. Let’s actualize that by exposing users to liability.

Learn More

A Warning to Both Parties

When considering the votes at the presidential level, as well as those for the Senate and the House, it is abundantly clear that neither party has a hands-down mandate.  There was no “Blue Wave” in congressional races, but voters wanted a different type of governing from the White House.

Learn More

Debunking Election Misinformation

Information and data are of paramount importance to ensuring a free, open, and fair election. Let’s make sure the United States separates fact from fiction, and there is no better way than to look at the data.

Learn More

The Racism of Faulty Assumptions

Assuming that someone should be obligated to act and think in a particular way because they belong to one specific group is the racism of faulty assumption. It’s time for the Democrats to spend less time labeling others as racists and take a long, hard look at their own behavior.

Learn More

We All Need a Pilgrimage to D.C.

After the last highly partisan four years, it’s the parents’ turn to go to Washington. It’s a bit counterintuitive, but one cure for the politically torn and weary populace is experiencing the city in the flesh. To heal as a nation, we’re in dire need of seeing the big picture of what America stands for rather than being laser-focused on our own personal visions of the USA. 

Learn More

Let’s Embrace ‘Election Week’

My proposal is simple: No state releases results until all precincts are counted. No more watching states on a map in the CNN studio shift from red to blue to pink to pale blue. No more analysis of which county or uncounted precinct ballots are coming from and who it favors.

Learn More

Civility Must Win

Remember, we may not control how the votes are tallied, but we can control how we respond and treat one another once the election is over. I believe a win for America will depend not on the election results, but on how we treat one another once it is over.

Learn More

Will Trump End the Two-Party System?

Trump’s base supporters are indeed shrinking, but they still make up a sizable portion of the electorate. If he can retain this cohort following a possible loss, he’ll still wield significant political power.

Learn More

When Due Diligence Is Branded As Partisan

The mad genius of the dubious news stories that occupy today’s media ecosystem is that they cannot be effortlessly discredited. If a story rings true enough – wrapped up in so many asterisks, hidden behind such thick pettifog – then removing the facade of truthfulness takes time and resources.

Learn More

In Trump, I See Fidel Castro

As a Cuban-American, I feel compelled to speak directly to those with the same background and heritage and warn them how detrimental another four years of Donald Trump will be.

Learn More

Forget Big Pharma, Big Health Insurance Is The Problem

PBMs began processing pharmacy claims in the late 1970s-early 1980s but have grown to a nearly $400 billion industry. They are the designers of benefit plans, gatekeepers of patient plan formularies, the approvers of prior authorizations, and the enforcers of “step” or “fail first” therapies.

Learn More

Vote. Then Pray.

Today, Americans can offer up a prayer that we, as individuals, can muster the strength to contribute to our communities and our nation in the years to come, no matter the election results.

Learn More

Bridging America’s Generational Divide

Have my parents abandoned their conservative values? Absolutely not. They still believe in capitalism and free trade. They are pro-business. They are pro-life. However, they recognize issues just as pressing as protecting the unborn, such as climate change, gun control, and racial justice.

Learn More

What Will We Learn from the Pandemic?

Holding out my own incarceration as an example, we should be encouraged to use these difficult and tumultuous times to learn more about ourselves, our country, and our future. We will never be able to return to the ‘normal’ we had before, so instead, we should embrace a “new normal” that welcomes our pandemic experience.

Learn More

A COVID Dispatch from a Lost Suburban Paradise

Friends in my town have houses filled with many family members. Lasagna noodles have been sold out for weeks because whole tribes of kids have settled in and are working remotely. Grandkids from the City are going to public schools, which are crowded now that the population has swelled.

Learn More

Will Latinos Show Up for Biden?

If Biden wants to win, his messaging to Latinos needs to be concise and compelling. As it stands, his outreach remains muddled, leaving Latinos wondering if their issues are resonating or even understood.

Learn More

Watch Texas On Election Night

If Texas is close – within the O’Rourke v. Cruz range – for either Joe Biden or MJ Hegar, who is running for Senate, take it as an indicator of how the election will end up nationwide. If either of them wins, it may usher in not a Blue Wave, but a Blue Tsunami.

Learn More

Polls Show Biden Has A Commanding Lead

Bottom line: Both the national and state polls are telling a similar story. It’s one of Joe Biden holding a comfortable lead with just about three weeks until the final day of voting. There’s not a single poll I can point to either nationally or in a battleground state that reads differently.

Learn More

The Democratic Party Can’t Lose Itself

For the past four years, the Democrats have stood opposed to the GOP and the current occupant of the Oval Office. But rather than proving themselves to be the adults in the room as our president engages in name-calling and grievance politics, the Democrats have devolved into hysteria in more ways than one.

Learn More

Where Democracy Lives

If people manage to tear their gaze away from the national spectacle, they might find communities of citizens committed to upholding the values that make American democracy great: freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, tolerance, and respect.

Learn More

Thankful Thoughts from the Road

The people who I am most grateful for are the ones who I see on the road. The woman who makes my sandwich at Subway – she is out here working for a lot less money than I am. She is also in contact with a lot more people than I am. Funny, over the last few weeks, I have been talking with these people. I never really did that before.

Learn More

Smart Cards are the Future of Voting

It’s vital for fair and accurate elections that the electoral process is transparent, precise, and authenticated. Through the use of smart cards, I believe we’ll have a credible, trustworthy way of electing our democratic leaders.

Learn More

Reflections of a Masked Canvasser in Florida

As I look around, there are just as many Trump signs here as there were four years ago – and quite a few pickup trucks with Trump flags. Not many people I know are turning. However, I have noticed that there are a lot more Biden signs than there were Clinton ones.

Learn More

Our Election Security Mostly Is An Illusion

Security Theater is an excellent tool for calming a distressed population with a reassurance that they’re not out in the wild alone and left to fend for themselves. Still, there is a time and place where it works and a time and place where a heavily divided electorate requires more to help ensure the smooth transition of power, which may seem like a distant memory come November.

Learn More

Don’t Defund the Police, Insure Them

There’s so much talk today about “defunding the police.” The sound bite has morphed into many different interpretations – ranging from the reallocation of funds to dissolving entire police forces and rebuilding them from the ground up. I have a different idea: Let’s require police officers to carry liability insurance.

Learn More

Do All Lives Really Matter?

I want to believe that we all live and exist on equal footing. However, today, you do not have to look that hard to see that is not the case. Until we bring about the change that we desperately need, we need to insist that Black Lives Matter. Only then will All Lives Matter.

Learn More

Summoning Our Young to Serve

We are at war in 2020. The primary enemy to our civil liberties is the virus itself. We will secure the freedom that so many of us crave by defeating it. As has been the case for centuries, we need our young to sacrifice to help win.

Learn More

The Nature Gap

People of color, families with children, and low-income communities are most likely to be deprived of the benefits that nature provides.

Learn More

The US Should Face Racism Like Germany Faces the Holocaust

There are many good examples of countries that have attempted to reconcile after traumatic acts, like genocides, massacres, and apartheid. Yet, the United States of America hasn’t committed to the process of truth, reconciliation, and justice after the original sin of American slavery. 

Learn More

Trick-Or-Treating on Decline

Trick-or-treating isn’t disappearing, but many American families are shifting from traditional door-to-door routes to organized events, malls, and “trunk-or-treat” gatherings for convenience and safety.

Learn More

Child-Proofing the World

Nick Gillespie argues that American culture has grown increasingly anxious and overprotective, projecting exaggerated fears onto children who are, by most measures, thriving.

Learn More

Join our community of over 140K independent minds

Subscribe to the FREE Smerconish.com Daily Newsletter

The most important news of the day, delivered right to your inbox.

If you can’t find the confirmation email in your inbox, please check your junk or spam folder. 

We will NEVER SELL YOUR DATA. By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Smerconish.com. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Mailchimp.

The Latest News from Smerconish.com in Your Inbox

Join our community of over 100k independent minds

If you can’t find the confirmation email in your inbox, please check your junk or spam folder. 

 

We will NEVER SELL YOUR DATA. By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Smerconish.com. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Aweber