‘Too Hot To Handle’ is the weirdly based reality TV show we need
Media regularly impacts culture and culture regularly dances with politics, and I have to say, while I don’t write about culture often, I do thoroughly enjoy discussing it, and I am
Media regularly impacts culture and culture regularly dances with politics, and I have to say, while I don’t write about culture often, I do thoroughly enjoy discussing it, and I am
“Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal.” —Martin Luther King, Jr.
Over the weekend, I decided to take a winter hike. If you live in Northeast Kansas, this isn’t unusual because the temperature is still usually bearable and in the summer there are so many ticks that you know
More and more ranked-choice voting has been getting talked up as the “key to fairer elections,” and after Democrat Laura Kelly became Governor of Kansas, it seems this
Today is officially the last publication day of the year for The Kansas Constitutional. I am looking at 2024 with optimism for new adventures and new beginnings.
Earlier this month, a video of a woman talking about how shocked she is to be treated well by her husband after previously being in an abusive relationship went viral, getting over half a million
Republicans and Democrats often give the impression that they are at odds with each other. However, when you really take a closer look at the two political parties, what you find is that both sides
The past few months, Gov. Laura Kelly has made it known that it is her mission to grow the government through Medicaid expansion. She has pushed a lot of misinformation
While Governor Laura Kelly, and the media surrounding her, mostly talk about expanding Medicaid, the Democratic governor actually has another big agenda item that doesn’t
Politics regularly get people fired up and thinking the worst about the way things are going. However, as a source that pushes to shrink government, protect children, and expand
In Sunday’s letters to the editor at the Kansas City Star, one reader went off on “unsolicited political advertisements” on his cellphone. Richard Ong of Overland Park, who
Kansas rejected liquor by the drink laws in 1970. However, by 1986, a statewide revamp of prohibition-era laws brought back the issue to the ballot, bringing about the 30 percent rule.
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