
Gregory Peskay | 9/11, When We Were United
Patriot Day, 9/11: That one day of ever-lasting visual impressions. Phone lines jammed spreading the news along with a fear of the unknown. Where non-stop television broadcasts were about straight,

Patriot Day, 9/11: That one day of ever-lasting visual impressions. Phone lines jammed spreading the news along with a fear of the unknown. Where non-stop television broadcasts were about straight,

Re: Jim de Bree, “We Must Reform the Recall Process” (commentary, Aug. 19). In my opinion, Mr. de Bree is overlooking the rationale of the California recall process, and trust

You must take this medicine. You must not take that medicine. You must wear this mask. You must not go to work. You must stand on this dot. You must

Just finished reading the front-page story, “Parents, staff protest mandates” (Sept. 9) and I have to wonder if protester Jess Guidroz and his fellow protesters have been sleeping or somehow

Like many California voters, I had not decided who to vote for in the second part of the recall ballot. On Saturday, Aug. 28, Kevin Faulconer, the former mayor of

The average COVID-19 fatality is two years older than Joe Biden. Those folks are not just statistically old; they’re also so statistically rare, you’d need an average of more than

The following is a copy of a letter sent to the board of the SCV Water Agency: One would think the lessons of building in high-fire-hazard zones would be learned.

The Signal reported (Sept. 4) that about 100 Santa Clarita residents gathered at the Porsche dealership in Valencia to demand that Gov. Gavin Newsom come out and face them. But

When I think of the great state of California, I think of its people, its places, and its natural beauty and climate, which makes it the magnet for people from

On Tuesday, Sept. 14, California voters will determine whether to recall the current governor of California, Democrat Gavin Newsom, and if so, whom to replace him with. Like many other

Before Ronald Reagan was president of the United States, he was the popular Republican governor of the state of California. Like many in the entertainment industry of the time, he

Lois Eisenberg’s letter in The Signal on Sept. 3 is so focused on a tree, she missed the whole forest. Republican criticisms have NOTHING to do with “intervention in Afghanistan.”

Arthur Saginian writes interesting letters that invite others to consider various viewpoints. In the remarks about how he concluded that Rev. David Hegg’s belief is not based on knowledge, whereas

Mr. Gary Horton’s latest column (Sept. 1) is a valiant effort to put lipstick on a pig, as one of I sure his favorite politicians used to say. He is

On Oct. 15, 2020, Joe Biden tweeted the following: “We’re eight months into this pandemic, and Donald Trump still doesn’t have a plan to get this virus under control. I

Religion: that which can unite, divide or confuse us. Like Arthur Saginian, I was once agnostic. Unlike him, I now believe in the Creator God. When I was an agnostic,

The strange compulsion for sticking noses into other people’s lives has gone through the roof over COVID-19. Who CARES if someone ELSE gets sick? “But it could make ME sick”

I read how Gary Horton plans to “fix the world with a few paragraphs” (commentary, Aug. 4). He started off pretty good with talk of citizenship and civic duty. He

Subject: Reporting certain illnesses during the pandemic. For as long as I can remember, the county of Los Angeles and the state of California would make periodic reports to the

Republicans criticizing Joe Biden and his administration about Afghanistan,which they have the prerogative to do, but lest they forget that George W. Bush “kicked the can down the road’ in