Karen Celestino-Horseman: Dumping migrants in other cities lacks compassion
Moving people around like pieces on a game board is not going to solve any problems.
Moving people around like pieces on a game board is not going to solve any problems.
Racialized groups are seen as token recipients rather than as partners.
If avoiding the tyranny of the urgent is a goal, building in disciplined disconnection through rest is the antidote.
Non-physicians … will second-guess and challenge physicians who are acting in a responsible, evidenced-based, good-faith manner.
Putin’s hubris has humbled Russia and set her back multiple generations.
Economic uncertainty will require not-for-profits to be prepared to adjust quickly to a fast-changing economic landscape.
The world can be a better place if we decide to make it better.
When it comes to being asked direct questions … some of them cannot and should not be answered with a “yes” or “no.”
A big reason for the high costs is that, for a while in this country, we had the idiotic belief that everyone should go to college.
Two of the most concerning categories of students are Indiana’s Hispanic and English Language Learner students.
In advance of the 2016 and 2020 elections, Trump told his supporters that, if he didn’t win, it would be due to a rigged system and outright fraud.
Since 2018, we have had over 30 women file to run for office.
Democracy is a participation sport. It doesn’t work without citizen involvement.
Who will be this century’s Barry Goldwaters or Howard Bakers, standing for country over party?
We should desire elected officials nuanced enough to understand diversity and display integrity.
Reporters and newsroom staff today are being asked to carry the same workload three or four folks might have carried back in the late 1990s or early 2000s.
Artistic flourishing might not eliminate food deserts or stop homicides, but it is an antidote to despair.
This desire for safety is not just an individual wish, it is a communal one.
[Cheney] has stood for honesty, integrity and the rule of law—and for the U.S. Constitution.
Gene taught me that having your name on the building or stationery does not mean you need to have the corner office.