You’re 13; so decide already

    CBS’s unsung “Trophy Wife” is one of few sitcoms true to its “com.” In part, this is because it allows the children in its cast to be childish.    In one episode, gangly teen Warren, prodded to try out for a sport, announces he’s achieved “Jackie Robinson” status by joining the girls’ field hockey…

Weed vs. ‘white lightning’

  Everyone has experienced the oddness of meeting up with a long-lost acquaintance after many years, only to find impressions downright strange.   So it is with me and marijuana.   At least the smell of marijuana, that is.   Though long an advocate of its legalization, I’ve never inhaled it, except in the ambient sense.…

GOPs 17.2 percent solution

   As of mid-March, the nation’s rate of uninsured had declined to 15.9 percent from 17.1 percent in December.   We can’t know exactly where the rate stands now, but it’s lower. And, well, the nation’s Republican leaders will not have that.    They will do everything they can — and credit them for having done…

When every sperm is sacred

    Regularly I drive past individuals praying out in front of Planned Parenthood.     Supplication being a private thing, one can only imagine what appeals they direct skyward, out there in the cold and wind.     I like to imagine that they are praying that all women, regardless of income, have access to safe…

Algebra II vs. Citizenship I

   What would you say if someone told you that your state’s emphasis on algebra was undermining math instruction?    What would you say if that someone was a math instructor?    What would you say if someone said algebra as emphasized — overemphasized — was undermining democracy?    Well, I’m saying the latter.   …

One anecdote is all it takes

   “Yeah, well I heard . . .”    Four words just about sum up vast seas of political insight about matters that matter.     “I heard about the schools handing out condoms.”     “I heard about the Black Panthers intimidating voters.”     “I heard that illegal immigrants can get Medicaid.”      It hardly matters…

So they took a second job

    As the deadline nears for coverage under the Affordable Care Act, two types of hardworking Americans should be furious.     First: the working-poor millions who would be covered under expanded Medicaid if their state’s policy makers didn’t refuse it.     Second: the millions who work second jobs mostly to pay for health coverage. That…