Gaski: ‘On Church, State, Christmas and Liberals’
For the use of the membership only. by John F. Gaski, Ph.D. Once again, as is becoming a tedious ritual at this time of year, our country’s legal and political institutions are wrestling with the “separation of church and state” — or at least one highly visible aspect of it. This particular struggle even has Read the full article…

Indiana at 200 (40): Dublin Hosted 1st Women’s Conference
by Andrea Neal Hoosier women have come a long way since the mid-19th century when a proposal for women’s suffrage generated more scorn than acceptance. One political leader summed up the views of the day when he noted that women already enjoyed “the rights which the Bible designed them to have in this Christian land Read the full article…

A Doctor’s Concern for Private Practice
by Chad Davis, M.D. Indiana’s private practitioners, family doctors among them, need your help — a Code Red, if you will. Specifically, they need you to understand the economic pressures that change how your medical care is provided — and not just those changes associated with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (also known Read the full article…

College Football and the Role of Government
by Jon Bingham Which system do you prefer: college basketball’s March Madness or college football’s bowls-playoff? Your answer may indicate your view of the beneficial role of government. Should the government facilitate competition or predetermine much of the outcome? March Madness relates to the free market; college football exemplifies government control. For years, college football Read the full article…

Bohanon on Prejudice: ‘Nor Can I Have Any Other Way’
by Cecil Bohanon, Ph.D. In the summer of 1967, when I was about to enter the seventh grade, I watched television news reports of the Detroit riots on my grandmother’s black-and-white Philco. An elderly black woman cried on camera because she had been burned out of her apartment. My grandmother thought it was all “very Read the full article…

Republicans: ‘That’s Not How It Works . . .’
(For the use of the membership only.) “Like the mandarins of old, these officials are well-educated, well-mannered, well-intentioned and wrong.” — Dan Hannan in the Dec. 8, 2014, Washington Examiner by Craig Ladwig Republican officeholders are one thing. Republican voters are another. That was made clear this week as the U.S. House voted to fund Read the full article…

