The grave Coronavirus Crisis may yet uplift America, providing perspective on home, school, work and faith that encourage timeless and constructive values.
Is it merely a coincidence that a terrible pandemic that strikes especially hard against those over 70, appeared in the very midst of a presidential campaign exclusively dominated by just such targeted oldsters?
If nothing else, coronavirus should force elected representatives into more cooperation across party lines, along with recognition that politicos can’t control contagious diseases.
On March 3, Americans in 14 states will vote in primaries collectively known as “Super Tuesday,” but the day before, Israelis will cast ballots for the third time in less than a year and few citizens don't see anything “super” about it.
Big winners in the 2020 Academy Awards illustrated a possible reaction by Oscar voters to widespread criticism of white-male domination of the nominations.
Margot Robbie is a truly wonderful talent, but I hope that she doesn't continue with this Harley Quinn "Birds of Prey" series, even though they are clearly setting up for a sequel here.
The Trump administration's Middle East peace plan has been criticized as a political stunt, but such criticism ignores support from Arab powers and real conceptual breakthroughs.
President Trump’s election year State of the Union address struck a different tone from previous major speeches, well-crafted to connect with shifts in the national mood.
The governor blamed “gun violence” not “gang violence” for the recent shooting in Seattle, but the real problem is the catch-and-release policies for repeat offenders.
The Wall Street Journal/NBC survey showed only 54 percent of Americans felt “comfortable voting for a presidential candidate who is an evangelical Christian.”