Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Brian Springer | Kerchner Comments Wearing Thin

Week after week, month after month, you publish Rob Kerchner’s letters expressing his dissatisfaction of the governmental handling and the public reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic and, quite frankly, I’ve

Letters to the Editor

Richard Myers | Kerchner Overlooks the 1%

I just read Rob Kerchner’s, “Stop the COVID-19 Insanity,” Dec. 29, and don’t really understand what he would have us do. He seems to suggest that everyone will eventually get

David Hegg

David Hegg | Pressing on into 2022

By David Hegg As we look to the year ahead, I know we’re all still wondering what place the challenges of 2021 will continue to play in our lives. Over

Letters to the Editor

Ron Perry | A Life-Threatening Tint?

Recently I was stopped at a signal next to a person wearing a darkly tinted COVID protective shield. It was so dark, she had to lift it up to see

Letters to the Editor

Arthur Saginian | We’ve Been Told

The letter to the editor (Nov. 16) from Mr. Thomas Oatway of Valencia made me grin, and then I giggled a bit, and then I openly laughed (nearly spitting the

Letters to the Editor

Brian Richards | Defining a Vaccine

What is a vaccine? What is the medical definition of vaccine? According to the Centers for Disease Control, up until Aug. 21, a vaccine is the act of introducing a

Letters to the Editor

Thomas Oatway | Why Choose a Party?

I have been thinking a lot about this lately: Why be a Democrat? Well, it is obvious that I would not want to be a Republican. On the other hand,

Letters to the Editor

Rob Kerchner | Stop the COVID-19 Insanity

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over while expecting a different result. So why are governments around the world STILL touting masks and vaccines and

Letters to the Editor

Arthur Saginian | Looking Deeper into Water Issue

In his letter to the editor (Nov. 17), Ron Perry questions the veracity of “water shortages” during the current drought in light of continued residential development, and quite understandably so.

David Hegg

David Hegg | The Business of Peace

By David Hegg As you read this, it is either Christmas Day, in which case you should probably be with your family singing carols, drinking eggnog, or cleaning up the

Letters to the Editor

Rob Kerchner | Lessons from the Spanish Flu

Instead of killing a tiny 0.07% of the world’s population, what if COVID-19 killed between 1% and 5% of the world’s population?  And instead of an average fatality age of