Category: General

A Sane Solution for Healthcare Costs

Whether Obamacare’s 22 percent premium hikes announced shortly before the presidential election helped sink Hillary Clinton’s campaign will be parsed by political commentators for years to come. However, this much is certain: no matter what Donald Trump and a Republican-controlled Congress do next year, the die is already cast for 2017. What you see now…
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A Thanksgiving Miscarriage of Justice

We’re only one week away from Thanksgiving, a day for which rabid football fans are grateful. With an NFL triple-header, that means—if you include the pre-game chat—one can watch gridiron action from noon until nearly midnight. However, the thing that no pigskin aficionado appreciates is the prospect, no matter how small, that the Vikings-Lions, Redskins-Cowboys,…
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Healthy Eating a Long-Term Battle

Until I read about the pending opening of a Clean Eatz franchise in Huntington over the summer, I had never heard of the North Carolina-based restaurant chain. I was impressed with their proclamation that menu items are a maximum 500 calories, and that the owners’ goal is to help people adjust to a healthy lifestyle.…
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Meeting Candidates Restores Faith in Democracy

Unless you’ve already taken advantage of early voting, Tuesday will mark the latest venture into selecting our nation’s next president. And if you’re like a large swath of the American public, you may be filled with dismay over the choices.   It was the third such event I had attended this year. The first two,…
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Casting Stones is Dangerous Business

Unless there is some earth-shattering development in the next two weeks, Hillary Clinton will become the nation’s next president. Donald Trump’s campaign has been on the decline ever since his crude remarks about women 11 years ago became public knowledge. (Pause here to say that a woman I know very well remarked recently, “Anyone who…
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Contentious Debates Reflect More Serious Problem

The presidential debates have now concluded, but I can’t say they did much to help me make up my mind about how I will vote in less than three weeks. Whether it was Hilary Clinton and Donald Trump—or their running mates—going at each other, it felt more like watching dueling sound bites. Or listening to…
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In the Blink of an Eye, We can be Wrong

Though Blink was published nine years ago, an observation by author Malcolm Gladwell in his bestseller is more relevant than ever. A treatise on the split-second decisions we often make, at one point Gladwell talked about the negative reactions people had to various stimuli. As the son of a Jamaican mother, one wouldn’t consider him a…
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Presidential Gaffe Emphasizes Need for Prayer

The fact that Gary Johnson didn’t attract enough supporters in leading polls to qualify for last week’s first presidential debate is a good indication that the Libertarian candidate isn’t going to win the forthcoming election. It didn’t help matters any that a few weeks before, while being questioned on a national TV program about the…
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Lessons Forged in the Crucible of Misery

The comment that came out of left field one day left me wounded for the entire weekend. I wasn’t just offended. It was a kick-in-the-gut, you’re-not-too-hot sort of insult that left me clutching my stomach. Now that a couple weeks have passed, I marvel at the way God led me through this crisis of confidence.…
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The First Simone Biles

With football season in high gear and the presidential election drawing ever closer, the Summer Olympics are already fading into memory. Yet I couldn’t let them pass without commenting on the special feelings they left millions with—like me, awed by the incredible athletic talents displayed in Rio de Janeiro. Ironically, our Olympics viewing tended to…
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