First Things First: Letter from New York (September 2001)

[This essay was written by my wife Cheryl and me shortly after the terrorist attacks on New York City in September 2001] On September 11, when a catastrophic event rocked our New York, we little survivors in our little lives seemed to set our course in curious unison. Our destination? …

Interstate 80: A Serialized Travelogue (Part 3)

The on-ramp to I-84 is a bobsled chute that propels us away from the Microcosm, temporarily southwest towards Waterbury and away from the ESPN headquarters in nearby Bristol.  Ah…ESPN—a microcosm through cable unto itself.  A place where a programming team sits around all day in complimentary Nike gear and continues …

Climate Change Skeptics Don’t Have To Be a Barrier

I wanted to follow up on one of my previous posts about anthropogenic climate change skeptics, like myself.   Meg Bostrom, co-author of a 2009 report on the current climate conversation, makes an interesting point in a recent Washington Post column.  It’s a point I’ve made in this blog, although admittedly she …

Review of Christopher Hitchens’ “Hitch 22”

[Sensitivity alert:  the “c” word and the “f” word are used in this post.] The title of Christopher Hitchens’ memoir, Hitch 22 is based on the brilliantly acerbic WWII satire by Joseph Heller Catch-22, the title of which has entered the lexicon and describes a no-win situation, a “catch” that …

City Parks I: I Remember Messrs. Fields and Martin

August 2019–It’s the 39th anniversary this week of the murder of two young black men–Theodore T. Fields, Jr. and David L. Martin–in Liberty Park, Salt Lake City. The murderer was an avowed racist who had killed serially before. This was his last crime before being caught, sentenced and, thankfully, imprisoned. …

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