
Going for gold
The 2024 Summer Olympic Games in Paris have captured much of my attention over the past week.
The 2024 Summer Olympic Games in Paris have captured much of my attention over the past week.
Academic freedom globally is declining in 23 countries and has increased in only ten countries compared to 2022.
“Are you better off than you were four years ago?”-Ronald ReaganIt is no secret that President Biden is unpopular.
Good vibes fill the air this primary election season.Or at least that’s my impression after looking through dozens of pieces of campaign literature forwarded to me from Kansas Reflector readers.
Thirty-five trillion.Wow, that’s a really, really big number -- big enough that it deserves my exploitation of it as the entire opening paragraph of this column.OK, so add “dollars” after that really, really big number if you must, or put a dollar sign before it, as in “on July 26, the US national debt pass the $35 trillion mark.”That feels like a real milestone -- around $7 trillion more than last year’s Gross Domestic Product, which supposedly represents the value of all goods and services produced in the US -- but it didn’t generate nearly as much panicked media notice as I’d expected it to.Maybe the American press is a bit distracted by the weirdest presidential campaign season in decades (and that’s saying something!).Or maybe the national debt has just grown so large, and its growth accelerated to such speeds, that it’s become the usual and really only merits the “footnote and yawn” treatment these days.I’m old enough to remember when American politicians engaged in vigorous public hand-wringing about their debt (all the while, of course, pretending it was YOUR debt), occasionally even tinkering with tiny spending cuts or not so tiny tax hikes to “do something” about it.Those days are long gone.
My past and present colleague, friend and companion on the long road of type 1 diabetes, Andy Obermueller, died last week.
In October 1893 my great-grandfather, Adolph Isern (they called him Dolph) and his brother Ernest boarded a Santa Fe Railroad train from Barton County for Chicago to attend the Columbian Exposition.
I admit it, I am a political junkie, and I have not been able to stop listening to the radio, watching the TV or reading about recent events, all of which can be best described as unprecedented.
When I was a little girl, I was nourished with healthy food, clean drinking water, safe housing, access to education, adequate medical care, and the loving support of family and friends.