Opinion category, Page 325
Editorial: Hospital expansions, costs need checks for patients
The number of names in the hospital game is shrinking, even in a state abundant with facilities. Large hospitals buy smaller ones to create health systems. Health systems merge to create regional or statewide networks. On top of that, the building of more facilities happens steadily. More beds, more services,...
Letter to the editor: Democrats creating jobs
State Republicans have embraced President Biden’s agenda, claiming it as their own. PA EDGE (House Bill 1059) would establish specific incentives applied to investments that create jobs across an array of Pennsylvania industries including: • A regional clean hydrogen hub. • Natural gas-derived fertilizer production. • Biomedical and semiconductor manufacturing....
Tom Purcell: The gift of Christmas cheer
I’m not feeling it this year. I’m just not feeling the Christmas spirit of any kind, and I know, for the benefit of others, I need to get out of my slump. Christmas cheer is a real thing. A variety of studies have found we actually do become more cheerful...
Letter to the editor: Republicans’ bad idea on guns
Has anyone thought that maybe the Republicans’ idea that everyone can own a semi-automatic handgun or rifle might be a bad idea? Diane Powell New Kensington...
Letter to the editor: Where are all the workers?
I can’t understand why announced national employment numbers are so positive. Where are these people working? Local major highways are filled with cars during daylight working hours, and how is that explained? If you seek help in local banks, hardware stores, restaurants, etc., there aren’t enough workers to help you,...
Letter to the editor: Complementary Pa. senators
Congratulations Democrats! You have succeeded in electing two senators from Pennsylvania who complement each other: Bob Casey won’t do anything, and John Fetterman can’t do anything. What a country. J.R. Smith Penn Township, Westmoreland County...
Letter to the editor: Letter about Oprah hypocritical
I don’t usually send a response to a letter to the editor, but I couldn’t stay silent about what I read this morning (“Maybe Oprah will have something for us all for Christmas,” Nov. 17, TribLIVE). Whether you appreciate Oprah or not, this letter was at the height of hypocrisy....
Editorial: More work needed on mental health capacity to stand trial
Sometimes doing the right thing doesn’t fix the problem. In September, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court looked at the case of a mentally ill man convicted of a crime who was charged with another crime while in state prison. A judge found the man’s profound mental illness meant that, under a...
Letter to the editor: Steps to a fair election
There are a lot of “conspiracy theories” out there with regards to the 2020 presidential election and the 2022 midterm election. We have gone to “mail-in” ballots and computerized voting (which I believe can easily be hacked or otherwise manipulated). We will never have a “fair” election in this country...
Letter to the editor: Election results show that talk is cheap
So, America, the election is over, and I realized one thing: People (mainly the middle class and poor) are all talk. You see how this administration is ruining our country; you see how they allow illegals to not only trample the border, but leave behind tons of trash for, I...
Editorial cartoons for the week of Nov. 28
Editorial cartoons for the week of Nov. 28....
Mallard Fillmore cartoons for the week of Nov. 28
Mallard Fillmore cartoons for the week of Nov. 28....
Peter Morici: Sunak’s ideas won’t fix what’s broken in Britain. Here’s what will work.
U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is looking to cut spending and raise taxes to appease financial markets, but that won’t give Britons a renewed path to growth and prosperity. From 2010 to 2016, David Cameron led the U.K. out of the global financial crisis with taxes at a fairly stable...
Sheldon H. Jacobson: TSA faces ethical limits in use of AI, but improvements must persist
Artificial intelligence has become a disruptive force in society. Terms such as machine learning, deep learning and neural networks have become commonplace among mainstream media, elicit ing visions of innovation that has the potential to change our lives. At its core, AI attempts to mimic the capabilities of the human...
Letter to the editor: We need both term limits and age limits
I agree with Gary Franks concerning age limits in Congress (“We need an age limit for federally elected officials, Supreme Court justices,” Nov. 18, TribLIVE). I’ll go one step further: two terms for the Senate and five for the House, 12 and 10 years, respectively. As the founders intended it,...
Letter to the editor: Sending love to the ‘unwanted’
To letter-writer Joyce Andrews (“No ‘choice’ condemns unwanted children,” Nov. 13, TribLIVE): Thank you for sharing another side of the coin in the abortion issue. I hear you and send you a warm hug. I sincerely hope that, as soon as you were able, you found a way to love...
Letter to the editor: Republicans aren’t so great at managing economy
I have never understood why so many people believe the Republicans are better than the Democrats at managing the economy. Ten of the last 11 recessions began under Republican presidents. Since Herbert Hoover (1928), all Democratic administrations ended with a higher growth rate than all of the Republicans, with one...
Letter to the editor: ‘Dangerous’ candidates, book bans, CRT
Some random thoughts: • No matter who you voted for Nov. 8, if you listened to or watched any of the PAC ads, every candidate running was “dangerous and extreme.” • It’s harder than ever to get kids to read books. Some parents and school boards have figured out an old...
Editorial: Automatic state pay increases aren’t fair to the people
Asking for a raise isn’t easy. Well, asking for one might be, but actually getting one is different. For many, it involves sitting down with your boss and justifying not only the job you are doing but also its increased value over what you are being paid. Maybe it happens...
Letter to the editor: Are we prepared for clean energy?
I don’t think most citizens have thought enough about the new clean energy being pushed at such a rapid pace. This pace will create many problems that should be resolved first to eliminate major problems as we proceed. There has to be a gradual phase-in to be successful without putting...
Letter to the editor: Run elections like the lottery
Our election system is archaic. Consider the lottery system: Hundreds of millions of entries are recorded, and a winner is known within a few hours. Not only the winner, but also the location where the ticket was purchased, plus all the lesser winners that didn’t quite get all the numbers....
Jennifer Bertetto: Why Trib Total Media is nixing negative political ads
A letter to readers from Jennifer Bertetto, president and CEO of Trib Total Media • Like you, we’re sick and tired of political attack ads. So, we’re getting rid of them. All Trib Total Media publications now have a new policy for political advertisements: They can be about the candidate,...
Joseph Sabino Mistick: Giving thanks for our ‘exceeding blessings’
On Nov. 12, 1945, just seven months after the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President Harry S. Truman issued a proclamation to mark the first Thanksgiving since the end of World War II. “We give thanks with the humility of free men, each knowing it was the might of no...
Jillian Peterson and James Densley: Rampage at Va. Walmart follows upward trend in supermarket gun attacks
A gun rampage at a Walmart in Virginia is the latest amid a rise in mass shootings in general in the U.S., and mass shootings at grocery and retail stores in particular. Multiple people including the gunman were killed in the incident Nov. 22 at a Walmart in Chesapeake. It...
Jeannine Bell: Suspect in the Colo. LGBTQ shootings faces hate crimes charges — what exactly are they?
The 22-year-old suspected shooter at a gay nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colo., who allegedly killed five and injured dozens faces five counts of murder and hate crimes charges. Hate crimes are known as “bias-motivated” crimes in Colorado. The charges against the shooter are still preliminary, although Colorado Springs Mayor John...
