Dana Black: Vote for candidates upholding the First Amendment
It appears that, when it comes to citizens who don’t align with Republicans’ ideology, this amendment does not apply.
It appears that, when it comes to citizens who don’t align with Republicans’ ideology, this amendment does not apply.
Whatever the voters’ verdict, for the health of the nation, let us hope and pray outcomes are clear.
It is hard to know who should get the prize for the lowest behavior in this year’s campaign
Slow processes and imperfect laws built on compromise are features, not bugs.
It has been well-documented in studies and books like “Voice and Equality” that people with lower incomes are less likely to vote, or they vote at lower rates.
This kind of government, in which compromise is viewed as surrender, has led us to the very dysfunctional situation we are in today as a nation.
Fighting is the obvious parallel between the two.
The role of the party is not to come in with a heavy hand demanding absolute compliance on every single issue.
Even if the policies behind the catchy titles are disastrous, at least ‘health care is a human right’ and ‘Medicare for all’ sound enticing.”
Monument Circle’s social vibrancy and Starbucks’ bottom line depend on the thousands of daily office workers who are no longer there.
Currently, shelters are filled and need your help.
The commission issued a good report, but it contains nothing really innovative or cutting-edge; Indiana is not ready for that.
A 2018 report found a $2 increase in the price of cigarettes would prevent an estimated 58,100 Hoosier youth from becoming adult smokers.
Several new restaurants, retailers and businesses have recently opened or are planning to open their doors in Boone and Hamilton counties.
With the addition of Maryland and Missouri, 21 states have legalized recreational marijuana for adults over the past decade—even though it remains illegal under federal law.
The Indiana Economic Development Corp. says the WestGate One campus in Odon will accelerate the re-shoring of semiconductor research and manufacturing in the U.S.
The problem is, this nanny-state, tax-hiking mentality is its own unhealthy addiction, and it won’t stop with cigarettes.
It is well known from multiple authoritative sources that increasing the cigarette tax is probably the most effective single strategy for reducing smoking rates.
Failure to invest in public health—and to raise taxes on all tobacco products—is not without cost.
Indiana’s per capita spending on public health in 2019 was $55; the national average was $91.