All but two Cape newspapers are owned by a private equity company. What are we losing? What’s the impact? A longtime editor discusses what we can do about it.
Read MoreBaseball is a game that is considered way too slow…at the same time that the average pitch is clocked in at 90 miles per hour, with pitchers doing their best to make every one look exactly the same. But when you know the difference between curveballs and knucklers, sliders and sinkers the fun really starts.
Read MoreWe seem unable even to talk about racial strife in America today. In her new book, Raising White Kids, Jennifer Harvey suggests better ways to teach children about race because the way we’re currently going about it is making it worse.
Read MoreOne of the very few opinions that most Democrats and Republicans, Libertarians and Independents share is that American democracy has become increasingly broken and beholden to big money.
Read MoreNew Orleans is a crossroads of humanity that has survived by continuously reinventing itself and refusing to be defeated in the face of hurricanes, racism, yellow fever, political corruption, and crime.
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It was Bette Davis who said, “Old age ain’t no place for sissies,” and at 85 years-old, Madeleine Kunin, the first woman elected Governor of the State of Vermont, proves she’s still tough enough to take it.
Read MoreCan a president obstruct justice? Can he be charged with a crime? Can he fire the Special Prosecutor appointed to investigate his alleged crimes? Law Professor Andrew Coan talks about the constitutional protections granted the President of the United States.
Read More5G will connect traffic signals and weather satellites, monitor our health, home security, electric power, and water usage. But it may also cause brain damage, cancer, track our every move, and even be weaponized.
Read MoreThe Cape Cod Rail Trail is a 25 mile bike path that winds by briny seaports, sandy beaches, delectable seafood, and diverse landscape of salt marshes, pine forests, and cranberry bogs but then, according to local residents, abruptly dumps cyclists into the region’s most hazardous intersection.
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