I noticed a couple of weeks ago that Phyllis Schiafly died, founder of the Stop ERA movement and later the Eagle Forum, an institution dedicated to keeping women in the home. She was a firebrand who seldom stayed at home, herself, but opened every public forum by thanking her husban
Being swatted no longer conjures the image of a rolled up newspaper and a fly. It refers to people who open their front doors to find a swat team in full gear. Swatting is the latest form of cyber bullying after Gamegate (Bog 12/9/14), harassment originally aimed at “uppity” f
I took up fencing as my sport in college. Over time I learned to be quick, meaning my movements were subtle enough to fool my opponent. While I performed well with fencers who were at or above my skill level, I fared miserably among those of few skills, those who imaged a sword wa
Under the law corporations are people, right? That ruling, by the way, wasn’t the outcome of Citizen’s United. It appeared in the 1886 case of Santa Clara vs. Southern Pacific Railroad Co. While the Supreme Court didn’t settle the railroad case on the question of personhoo
A column by Leonard Pitts appeared in the Miami Herald recently entitled, “The End of Objective Truth.” (The Week, September 9, 2016, pg. 12.) His point was that falsehoods repeated over and over again gain an emotional credence that has “wrecked the idea of objective, k
Warren Buffett, the second richest man in America, says if he dies before his wife, she should invest her money in Vanguard’s Index Mutual Funds. That’s a conservative investment that isn’t likely to go far wrong but is it advice for everyone? A danger exists in being to
Sometimes I feel like a bat, viewing the world while hanging upside down. Let’s begin with the small absurdities: that some universities are allowing African-American students to re-segregate, allowing them to choose all black housing so they can avoid, “insensitive remarks.”�
Sometime ago, I wrote about a few local, female politicians who picketed an “old boys’ club” in my community — a place of privilege where political agendas were set without a public process. To put an end to this exclusivity, the women decided to shine a light on what
In politics, people want access to their elected officials but when they get it, others are tempted to wonder what goes on behind closed doors. As a former public servant, I am aware of the opportunity for distrust. When I served, everyone wanted to see me, it seemed. If they
“The universe is not only queerer than we suppose but queerer than we can suppose.” So observed J. B. S. Haldane, a scientist and popularizer of science who died in the 1960s. Thinking about existence, I can imagine no statement more accurate than Haldane’s. Not only are h