While there are times where I find myself “tacking on” my thoughts on something to my articles, as a rule, I always have a specific main subject — one main point to bring to the table. This week, however, I feel the need to bring more than one, in the tradition of Ronald Rowe’s excellent “Winners & Losers” column. Of course, I’m not one to plagiarize — and besides, for one of these subjects, the winner and the loser will be unknown until June. So — without further ado…
We’re Number One!
Sounds good, I know…but of course, there’s a catch.
Why Make Employers Pay? A View from Canada
by Jane Wangersky March 30th, 2012 | Political Opinions
As the U.S. Supreme Court ponders whether it's constitutional to require citizens to buy health insurance, we residents of Canada (I'm a dual citizen) might be expected to shrug and say, "So what? We've been forced to buy health insurance since 1966."
In fact, I don't want to get into that question -- I want to focus on something that's seemingly been forgotten in the recent debates. I don't mean the birth control question, exactly. When I heard that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act meant employers would have to pay for employees' birth control, my reaction was not
In fact, I don't want to get into that question -- I want to focus on something that's seemingly been forgotten in the recent debates. I don't mean the birth control question, exactly. When I heard that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act meant employers would have to pay for employees' birth control, my reaction was not
Imagine All the People Living Life In Peace
by Jason Lightner March 27th, 2012 | Independent Ideas
Let's continue that message of peace and unity from last week, shall we?
Every day of my waking life, I marvel at the grand scope of it all – how we're the Universe experiencing itself; how we are all the same atoms that were strewn about billions upon billions of years ago in spiraling clouds of gas and stardust that eventually created the galaxies we know and the world that we know. I think about human understanding, exploration, curiosity. I sit in amazement that we can live in a time where we can actually see the beginnings of our
Every day of my waking life, I marvel at the grand scope of it all – how we're the Universe experiencing itself; how we are all the same atoms that were strewn about billions upon billions of years ago in spiraling clouds of gas and stardust that eventually created the galaxies we know and the world that we know. I think about human understanding, exploration, curiosity. I sit in amazement that we can live in a time where we can actually see the beginnings of our








