Kyle S. Reyes
Think Cops Are Racist Killers? HERE Is Why You’re Wrong.
Police are evil racist Nazi pigs. According to certain fringe groups, that is. But I'd suggest the majority of Americans are pretty sick and tired of this narrative.
Kyle S. Reyes
Police are evil racist Nazi pigs. According to certain fringe groups, that is. But I'd suggest the majority of Americans are pretty sick and tired of this narrative.
Commentary
As the dean of a prominent graduate school of education noted in an article published several years ago: "Schools are not the major cause of the achievement gap." He also noted how ineffective most education reforms have been and how little improvement we have seen. It is understandable
Commentary
We all live in a moment in history where it is all-politics-all-the-time. Everything from our health to our wealth, from the womb to the tomb, is viewed through the lens of our increasingly divisive politics. The resulting distortions are many. The most serious is language, the very tool we use
Commentary
Each year, just before the Jewish New Year, I visit the same Central Massachusetts apple orchard to buy apples. It's a tradition in my family. It goes along with the practice of eating apples and honey on the holiday to symbolize hope for a sweet year ahead.
Commentary
It must take courage to become a Catholic priest these days. The culture is increasingly secularized, and faith is ridiculed or under suspicion everywhere, from universities to the government. Seminaries that train future priests must prepare them for the negativity they will face.
Commentary
In his marvelously insightful book, A Man and His Presidents: The Political Odyssey of William F. Buckley Jr., Alvin S. Felzenberg recalls the 1960 presidential contest when the National Review founder saw then-candidate Richard Nixon as "less the leader of the GOP than as the 'amalgamator' of
Commentary
Sunday, September 17 marks the 230rd anniversary of the signing of the United States Constitution. On September 17, 1787, 39 out of the 55 delegates at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia signed the Constitution of the United States and submitted it to the 13 states to be ratified by each
Commentary
The biological male formerly known as Bradley Edward Manning has two qualifications for becoming a visiting fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government: betraying the country and seeking to have genitalia chopped off. Imagine some other former U.S. Army specialist getting an appointment at Harvard without those
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