James Carville calling Marjorie Taylor Greene and other Republican hecklers ‘white trash’ is as offensive as the behavior he means to criticize.
Author: Connie Schultz, USA TODAY
How do you want to be treated? Start there, please.
New York magazine has published a guide to best etiquette practices, and I am here for it. Not because I agree with all 140 rules. Golden rule is key.
Thanks for nothing, Punxsutawney Phil. I take that back. I’m grateful, even for winter.
Groundhog Punxsutawney Phil spotted his shadow again. Wonder if Phyllis might be a little braver. Six more weeks of winter, but I won’t waste any day.
What if our reaction to Prince Harry and his book is more about us than him?
Why I’m paying attention to Prince Harry’s memoir, ‘Spare’: Sharing his Afghanistan service, he hopes to help ‘reduce the number of suicides.’
Two years after Jan. 6 Capitol riot, Republicans are divided as ever
In the shadow of Jan. 6 attack, Kevin McCarthy’s speaker vote circus on Capitol Hill only makes America look more vulnerable to the rest of the world.
So, this is Christmas: Embrace the joy and beauty of the season, even when it’s hard
As a practicing Christian, I am called to acknowledge the suffering and do what I can to help. I look for permission to feel the joy of the season.
How the Guardians, and SpongeBob, finally made me fall in love with Cleveland baseball
Cleveland’s baseball team has not won a World Series since 1948. This year turned out to be no different, except it is different in almost every way.
Americans want stricter gun safety measures. Gen Z will help us get there.
Generation Z is always thinking about gun violence. It’s time to listen to young people about guns and gun safety.
COVID-19 is still deadly real. Why do we allow disinformation to persist?
In the face of false, dangerous rhetoric, we don’t owe anyone silence. This is the truth: COVID is real and more than 1 million Americans have died.
‘I’m going to put a box around work’: That’s a country song waiting to happen
So much judgment-passing as the pandemic-induced resetting of workplace norms takes place. Can we remember these workers are real people?