Jim Shella: Predictions about corruption have come home to roost
Everything comes with a price, and, when casinos produce huge profits, greed is sure to follow.
Everything comes with a price, and, when casinos produce huge profits, greed is sure to follow.
The effort to rapidly bring an effective vaccine forward for massive distribution and inoculation has been truly amazing.
Trump is far from my ideal for a president, but he is right for the job.
I will be voting against Trump, but I will also be voting for Biden.
On the debate stage, Trump stood in all his naked glory—his bad behaviors of the past four years condensed into an hour-and-a-half spectacle.
We have lost our ability to humanize those who came to our shores seeking our help.
I am left to wonder how much more quickly we would return to normal if the leadership in Washington leaned on medical science rather than polling data.
Sadly, some Indiana conservatives have criticized the governor for doing what is so clearly the right thing.
Progress is fragile, elusive and agonizing in its distance, and many aspects of police reform remain unfinished.
This single election is going to define who we are as Americans and the future path of our country.
It’s a shame public meetings had to be dragged into the 21st century by a global pandemic, but more access is always a good thing.
Given there is no coherent Republican health care reform plan, fixing Obamacare would be an affordable and achievable way to proceed.
It has been a terrible year for all of us. Our community needs something for which we can collectively cheer.
Muslim Americans make up only 1% of the national population, but they play a more significant role in the front lines of COVID-19.
As we work to address barriers to eLearning, we should also use the pandemic as an opportunity to shine a light on broader inequities in K-12 education.
Often, it is difficult to see the finish line when it appears so far in the distance—but it is there.
Recent polling gives Trump the advantage due to the disturbing social unrest, this lack of order.
He has vanquished his political opponent without even throwing a punch.
Fifty-five years ago this month, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act into law. Before that, Americans of all races had risked their lives trying to help African Americans exercise their right to vote.
Gov. Holcomb talks about limiting large gatherings in his COVID-19 briefings but seems to ignore the large gatherings that will occur for the Nov. 3 election.