Opinion category, Page 592
Pat Buchanan: Why D.C. statehood is a suicidal gamble
When U.S. cities erupted after the death of George Floyd, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser was in the vanguard of the protests, renaming a section of downtown Black Lives Matter Plaza, and painting the name in letters on the street so huge they could be seen from space. Last Thursday, however,...
Letter to the editor: Is a vote for Biden really a vote for Biden?
Letter-writer William Werts states “I’m pro-life, and I’m voting for Biden with no regrets” (“Pro-lifer plans to vote for Joe Biden,” Aug. 20, TribLIVE). With all due respect, voting for the devout Catholic who is pro-abortion aside, I don’t believe you are voting for Biden and his self-proclaimed values, but...
Letter to the editor: Questions on fear, racial unity
Just two questions for readers: Can a Republican win an election without appealing to fear? Why is racial unity so scary for white people? Suzie Morris Dunbar...
Letter to the editor: A speech Trump would never give
The speech Donald Trump would never give: My fellow Americans, America is going through a difficult time. We have lost over 187,000 citizens to the coronavirus. We mourn their loss and pray for their families. A reporter asked me recently if I feel responsible. I answered the way our previous...
Letter to the editor: Abortion is the greatest pandemic
The greatest pandemic is not covid-19. It is and has been the abortion virus for 50 years. There have been 70 million-plus deaths due to abortion since the 1970s. In one year, for example, 860,000-plus abortions (2017) were performed — four times the current covid-19 death count. Yet so many...
Editorial: Keep protests out of residential areas
Protests are staged where people feel they will do the most good. That seldom means they happen where they are the most convenient. If workers go on strike, they make their situation known outside the building, making a visible symbol of their opposition to the management. When people bring their...
Letter to the editor: Trump is pro-life, and not racist
Regarding William Werts’ letter “Pro-lifer plans to vote for Joe Biden”: You claim to be a pro-lifer, but I find that hard to believe, since President Trump this year became the first president to speak at the March for Life in Washington. I hope you read Albert Bianchini’s letter above...
Letter to the editor: Climate crisis and hurricanes
Hurricane Laura slammed into the Gulf Coast as a Category 4 storm, quickly strengthening from a Category 1 intensity. The rapid rise in the force of the wind is caused when three factors are present: • The water over which the storm is forming is warm — the Gulf of...
Tom Purcell: Why I’m ill prepared for the autumn of covid-19
I made it through the summer of covid-19 — though I’m thankful that neither I nor any of my family has contracted the novel coronavirus. I know that the summer doesn’t technically end until Sept. 22, but I got through June, July and August. It wasn’t easy. Every Monday, I...
Kris LaGrange: Will election end attack on organized labor?
Labor Day 2020, like no other in our nation’s history, is absent of parades and large gatherings. Canceled due to covid-19, celebrations are replaced with Zoom meetings that commemorate the American worker as we all hope better days are ahead. Traditionally on Labor Day union leaders boast of accomplishments of...
David Zatezalo: Serving America’s miners Labor Day and every day
As assistant secretary for mine safety and health, I know firsthand how miners across the country — more than 300,000 individuals — provide an essential service to our country. Miners work to extract, process and deliver the minerals, metal and coal that keep America working. President Trump has been a...
Editorial: Celebrating jobs on Labor Day
Labor Day. You know what it is. It’s a lazy day. A picnic day. The line in the sand beyond which no white shoes used to pass. The first Monday in September is a day off for most. Since 1894, the federal government has set it aside as a day...
Letter to the editor: Positive outcomes of coronavirus
Covid-19 has taught us some notable lessons. The virus has brought families closer. The lockdowns forced people to stay home and take a break, giving them time to spend with their loved ones. Coronavirus has also taught us to differentiate between wants and needs. Many businesses shut down for the...
Letter to the editor: What has happened to our blessed nation?
How can the most blessed nation in history find itself in such chaos and despair? How can so many be deceived so easily and led down the path of destruction? The standardized testing and corrupted curriculum of primary education and the subversive groupthink and indoctrination by universities have conditioned most...
Letter to the editor: Garbage problems in New Kensington
Regarding the article “New Kensington considering dumping garbage hauler as residents’ complaints pile up” (July 21, TribLIVE): Complaints are coming in about the new garbage hauler. Councilman Todd Mentecki said no one has told him they wouldn’t be willing to pay more, $3, $4 or $5 a month, to get...
Editorial cartoons for the week of Sept. 7
Editorial cartoons for the week of Sept. 7....
Mallard Fillmore cartoons for the week of Sept. 7
Mallard Fillmore cartoons for the week of Sept. 7....
Tom Melcher and Morgan O’Brien: A different Labor Day, a real opportunity
Labor Day 2020 certainly is a far cry from this day one year ago. While much has changed, we want to focus on the positive, and the great opportunity now at hand. Perhaps more than any Labor Day ever, we should all have a far greater appreciation for our region’s...
S.E. Cupp: Vote Biden, and make the presidency boring again
I heard a strange rumor recently that there are people out there, far, far away, who don’t spend the majority of their time thinking about politics. Instead of obsessing over tweets, binging on cable news 24/7, and pulling their hair out over the all-caps STATE OF OUR NATION, they’re —...
Letter to the editor: Questions about mail-in voting
Can someone please explain how these mail-in votes will be counted? And will they be counted before Election Day? And who’s going to sneak out results before Election Day? How long will it take to get results? I’m worried my vote may not be counted. Diane Miller Hempfield...
Letter to the editor: Waking up to craziness
Have I been in a coma for the last four years? Before I went out: If a person bankrupted two casinos, he was a nitwit, not a shrewd businessman. If a person didn’t pay his employees or taxes, he was despised by the working man, not revered. If a person...
Letter to the editor: Hypocrisy in what’s allowed, not allowed
There was a photo of families enjoying a musical performance at Townsend Park in Murrysville in the Aug. 6 edition of the Tribune-Review. The caption indicated the event was part of a series of live performances in the park. That would seem to indicate the event is sanctioned by community...
Letter to the editor: What Biden’s plans really mean
Revisiting Joe Biden’s campaign website and explaining how I see a few of his stances: 1. Clean energy — means hundreds of thousands of jobs lost in the gas and oil industries. Scratch off Pennsylvania, Joe. 2. Road map to schools reopening — means wait until Nov. 4 to appease...
Letter to the editor: Veterans proud to support Trump
Regarding Leonard Mucci’s letter “How can veterans support Trump?” (Aug. 26, TribLIVE): President Bill Clinton was a draft dodger. President George W. Bush was in the reserves. Joe Biden received five student draft deferments and was disqualified from service because of asthma, although in his memoir he talks about playing...
Editorial: Consistency counts for crowd sizes permitted under covid restrictions
President Trump’s airport rally in Unity on Thursday drew an enthusiastic crowd. Some people focused on the enthusiasm. Others just saw the crowd. The event, held at Arnold Palmer Regional Airport, drew thousands. Pennsylvania’s green-phase coronavirus pandemic restrictions cap outdoor gatherings at 250. The Republican campaign appearance might not have...
