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  • Steelers' great remembered for 'Immaculate Reception'

    Ray Fittipaldo Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated Dec 21, 2022

    PITTSBURGH - Former Pittsburgh Steelers running back Franco Harris, author of the most famous play in NFL history and one of the greatest players in franchise history, has died at 72. The Steelers confirmed the news of Harris' passing in a statement Wednesday morning. "It is difficult to find the appropriate words to describe Franco Harris' impact on the Pittsburgh Steelers, his teammates, the City of Pittsburgh and Steelers Nation," Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a...

  • Opinion: Vigilance needed against antisemitic views and ideas

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated Nov 1, 2022

    Thursday was the fourth October 27th since the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill, and antisemitism is in the news once again. We are reminded that hatred of the Jewish people endures; that it flares in times of political and economic uncertainty; and that antisemitic signals from prominent people serve as beacons of hate that draw bigots into the public square — and risk drawing them into action. Just this week, one of the most famous music artists in the world — Ye, formerly known as Kanye...

  • Opinion: Trust, maturity sorely lacking in today's politics

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated Sep 6, 2022

    Some would say the 20th century ended at Y2K — midnight on Jan. 1, 2000. Others would say that, as a historical phenomenon, it extended until the shock of Sept. 11, 2001. And others still might cite the Great Recession or even the election of Donald Trump as the real end of the long 20th century. Whichever one you subscribe to, Aug. 30, 2022, should be considered the end of the end — the death of the last personal link to the defining world conflict of the latter half of the 20th century. It is the day Mikhail Gorbachev, the...

  • Opinion: Cooperation may help nations identify UAPs

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated May 24, 2022

    They don’t try to communicate, and they don’t respond when we try to communicate with them. They speed away if we get too close. They move faster than anything known in this world and violate the laws of physics. At least 11 times, they’ve nearly collided with American military aircraft. And we have no idea what UFOs, now known as unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), are. Representatives from the military recently told a subcommittee of the House Intelligence Committee that fast-moving objects are entering U.S. airsp...

  • Opinion: Take a moment to invest in a little happiness

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated Jun 12, 2021

    After a year of uncertainty and financial upheaval, Americans have become more thrifty. Most adult citizens received more than $1,000 of stimulus money from the federal government during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to a survey from the New York Federal Reserve, citizens spent less than 30% of all stimulus funds, generally opting to save the money or lower their debt rather than pump it back into the economy. In light of the tumult of recent years, saving is a perfectly logical strategy. Paying off debt generally earns a...

  • Opinion: Pennsylvania example for all on unemployment

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated Jun 8, 2021

    Businesses are scrambling to fill job vacancies as the country continues to reopen from the coronavirus pandemic, but the reality is there simply are not enough people looking for work. The state of Pennsylvania made the right move to pull back on the relaxed standards for unemployment benefits and to reinstate the requirement that those collecting benefits must be actively looking for work. When the pandemic began more than a year ago, Pennsylvania and many other states relaxed rules related to unemployment compensation. In...

  • Opinion: Trump's ban step back for free speech

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Syndicated content|Updated May 18, 2021

    On Jan. 7, Facebook suspended President Donald Trump, striking a significant blow to his ability to communicate with the public. Banning him permanently from the platform would be a mistake. An independent review board of activists, lawyers and journalists known as the Facebook Oversight Board has been considering the question of whether Trump’s de facto ban was justified and whether he should be permanently excluded or allowed back on the platform. The oversight board has ruled the original suspension was legitimate, but a...

  • Opinion: Time to move on, focus nation on restoring peace

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Jan 16, 2021

    President Donald Trump leaves office in less than a week. What we need in those days, and beyond, is not more drama. We don’t need more drama from the president. And we don’t need more drama from House Democrats and their leader. That’s all a second impeachment accomplishes — more drama centering around Trump. The House has the right to impeach, and has exercised it. But now a trial must take place in the Senate. It can obviously not be organized and conducted, with due process of law, by Wednesday. And no matter what ev...

  • Opinion: Remembering greatest aviator of all time

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Dec 12, 2020

    Chuck Yeager died last week, at 97. It’s amazing that a great movie has never been made of his life. His was a life that, if anything, was larger than its own lore and legend. Maybe no movie, or actor, could do such a life justice. He went from a squirrel-hunting, outdoor-loving, wild West Virginia boy to the greatest test pilot of all time — arguably the greatest aviator of all time. The only two who could contest him for the title are Charles Lindbergh and Neil Armstrong. He flew 150 different military aircraft and log...

  • Opinion: Vaccine not the end, but there is hope

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Nov 17, 2020

    Finally ... some much-needed good news in the battle against the coronavirus. Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer Inc. announced last week that its COVID-19 vaccine showed an astounding 90% effectiveness rate in early test results and that initial doses — if approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration later this month — could be available by the end of the year. It seems everyone welcomed the news, from health officials to politicians to Wall Street, where the markets soared. Health officials have been saying for some time tha...

  • Opinion: To regain trust transparency the best choice

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Oct 13, 2020

    Secrecy fuels suspicion. It’s natural to wonder what happens behind closed doors. After immense public pressure from activists and politicians as well as a court motion by an unidentified juror, Kentucky’s attorney general elected to release a recording of the grand jury proceedings that didn’t result in homicide charges for the officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor. (One officer was charged with wanton endangerment for firing through a wall.) Roughly 15 hours of audio includes witness testimony, but not the p...

  • Opinion: Peace will rely on constant facilitation

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Sep 26, 2020

    The status between Israel and Bahrain is no longer ambiguous. Less than a month after the United Arab Emirates forged a peace agreement with the Jewish state, the Kingdom of Bahrain followed suit. Representatives from all three countries were on hand at a White House ceremony on Sept. 15 to celebrate the new Abraham Accords Declaration. In a region that will soon produce young Emiratis and Bahrainis who are fluent in Hebrew, Israeli graduates from UAE and Bahraini universities, and regular commercial flights among all three...

  • Opinion: Trump should not muddy TikTok waters

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|Updated Aug 11, 2020

    The social media app TikTok has been downloaded more than 175 million times in the U.S. alone since its global launch in 2018. But now it’s going viral for reasons other than teens dancing or cooking in pajamas. President Donald Trump recently announced that the U.S. government would ban TikTok on Sept. 15 or force the company to divest its U.S. holdings, citing national security concerns. The Chinese company ByteDance, which operates under the auspices of the Chinese Communist Party, runs the app. Although ByteDance c...