Religion should be private
Thanks for discussing religion and candidates running for office.
Thanks for discussing religion and candidates running for office.
Thanks to Mickey Maurer, again, for his voice of reason in the Indiana wilderness.
Today, we hear an endless drumbeat about job creation and use that as a metric to judge government incentives. What we really want is “wealth creation” through innovations that satisfy customers.
As one of my sons observed a few weeks back, when we were scratching our heads over an especially egregious bit of political buffoonery, very scared people desperately crave certainty in a world that has none.
Remembering the overblown reaction when the Super Bowl passed us by.
Kennedy believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.
It’s a predicament dripping with hypocrisy. This is a state, after all, where politicians routinely complain about the power of the federal government.
Franklin D. Roosevelt famously said, “When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.” Investors who heeded that advice during the scary decline last August and September have been rewarded.
My two sons and I headed to Indianapolis’ Super Bowl Village recently for some field research.
House Democrats and Republicans, who had been bickering like Patriots and Giants fans, suddenly seemed to drop all political pretenses, and returned to conducting the people’s business.
If the medical reports are correct as printed, and I assume they are, it would be hazardous [for Peyton Manning] to perform as quarterback.
John Stossel [Jan. 9 Forefront] did a nice job capturing much of the concern and uncertainty of Obamacare by employers.
I would like to commute by bus—I can’t. I work in Carmel, but IndyGo does not go beyond 96th Street.
Newt Gingrich is a horrid conservative standard-bearer.
We have seen the federal government use “crony capitalism” to save businesses that should have otherwise failed.
Obama has sought political gain by attacking Congress rather than seeking agreement.
If Congress played by the same rules that Hoosier families do, we could start addressing the critical issues facing our nation.
Yes, they could call a helpline, but they would land in an automated system, leave a message and days later might get a response.
In certain instances technology is actually changing the very nature of teaching and learning and helping students achieve at drastically higher rates.
Mitt was a prankster in school and stone sober.