• Was America Evil to Drop Atomic Bombs on Japan?

    During a recent appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Tucker Carlson made a bold claim about the August 1945 decision by the United States to bomb the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki—a move that effectively put an end World War II. He said: My ‘side’ has spent the last 80 years defending the

  • What Romanticism and Taylor Swift Have in Common

    Wherever you turn today, you’ll hear about Taylor Swift—her albums, tours, and dating life. For better or for worse, she has a sizeable impact on our culture. It’s no surprise, then, that her most recent album, The Tortured Poets Department, has hit a record number of sales, with 2.61 million debut units as the “best

  • AI: Machine Revolution – Business Traveller

    Artificial intelligence is transforming the travel industry, with huge strides in data analysis and generative AI set to create seamless, personalised travel for passengers

  • Creating Habits in an Age of Distraction

    There’s no doubt that we are more distracted than ever in our age of screens. Everything from the latest news on social media to our favorite movie to online shopping is only a few clicks away. The cost, though, is not a light one: The productive and meaningful habits in our life are taking a

  • Shareable Snack: What ‘Dracula’ Teaches Us About Weak Men

    For most, Dracula is a novel about horror. After all, Dracula is a blood-sucking fiend who stalks his victims. But beneath the thrills, which draw all the attention, are some serious reflections about masculinity. Watch our video to learn more! Save this article to favorites

  • Grant funds uplift business owners suffering tornado’s devastation

    The 16 grant recipients of the first round of the Tornado Relief Emergency Fund Small Business Grants gather Tuesday with the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce and Logan County

  • Reality Rejected: New NPR CEO Says 'There Are Many Truths'

    Do encyclopedias like Wikipedia or news organizations like NPR exist to tell us the truth, to inform us about reality? Perhaps it’s not so simple anymore. The recent example of the former CEO of Wikimedia and new CEO of NPR, Katherine Maher, is a case in point. A pair of Maher’s speeches have been making

  • What Four Years of Creative Writing Have Taught Me

    In 2020, I took my first college-level creative writing class. It was held on Zoom (compliments of COVID-19), and I wrote a clunky 500-word piece that was, in part, about a bug. Now, at the end of four years of writing prose, poetry, and hymns, my writing has become (at least slightly) more sophisticated. Here

  • Ladies, Let’s Start Speaking Well of Men

    There’s ample conversation about toxic masculinity in our culture today. In some circles, the consensus seems to be that all men want nothing but to wield power and subjugate women. Of course, many of us know that this isn’t true of all, or even most, men—we need the gifts of both genders to build a

  • The Vanishing Hardy Boys

    Gone are the days of the Renaissance Man; the polymath ideal of humanism; man is the center of the universe and he should embrace the search for all knowledge because man alone has the limitless capacity for development! Alberti, the architect, painter, poet, scientist, horseman, and mathematician; Da Vinci, the artist, painter, inventor, musician, scientist, and writer;

  • Friday Comic: Childhood Associations

    Credit: OwenComics (store) Twitter: @owenbroadcast Instagram: @owenbroadcast Save this article to favorites

  • How I’m Preparing My Children for World War III

    No one wants to see their child go off to war. But as a former intelligence officer and mother of two young sons, I’ve given a lot of thought to, well, the topic of war. I’ve considered the possibility that, if a global conflict broke out, my sons may find themselves suddenly called upon to