In the last week of February, take time to learn about notable African Americans from the state where we live. Most you've probably never heard of.
Brunch with Bridge
Vaccine refusers, and sympathizers, need to remember government’s role
If “freedom isn’t free,” as they say, one payment may be to remember that “promote the general welfare” part of the Constitution.
A broader deer hunt would save fenders and feed the needy
Michigan’s roadways can look like boulevards of broken Bambis, but if we really wanted to cut down on car-deer collisions, we’d allow a judicial increase in deer hunting.
In the selfie-sharing age, is a DNA sample an invasion of privacy?
Michigan’s new law allowing law enforcement to collect DNA from felony arrestees has civil libertarians upset, but as society’s definition of privacy evolves, the case may be moot.
New year, old battles and an upcoming year of more of the same (only worse)
Barack Obama and Rick Snyder are very different politicians, but in similar positions. One has gone on the offensive. It doesn’t seem to be on the other’s agenda. That, and other early portents, suggest an upcoming political year even nastier than the last.
As some take aim at school choice, Legislature is unlikely to agree
Proposal A opened a wealth of choices for parents and students, but some see the ensuing marketplace as too fragmented to serve students well.
Step by step, bit by Fitbit, self-improvement becomes a losing game
Some people can turn anything into a contest – even a friendly competition to improve one’s health. Running in place at the stove, anyone?
He’s had more than three strikes, and it’s time for Agema to go
Michigan’s Republican National Committeeman has disgraced himself, and his party, with a series of bigoted, hateful posts on his social-media pulpit.
When does freeway construction put us on a road to nowhere?
In Detroit, they paved Paradise Valley, and put up I-375. The people who lived in the way? Collateral damage, as always. Why can't we consider the human cost of coddling the car?
Downtown crowds rinsed of all color? That’s not Pure Michigan
We can understand out-of-town media outlets for excluding people of color from their depictions of Michigan city life, but not our very own tourism campaign.