Panem et circenses. The satirical poet Juvenal mocked the Roman populace for surrendering their societal ideals to the ruling class in exchange for ‘bread and circus’. Karl Marx updated Juvena’s mockery with his view that “religion is the opium of the masses” Modern day sports have supplanted circus and religion as the ‘opium of the […]
Category: Current Events
Arbitrary & Capricious. Webster’s Dictionary defines the word pairing as “unrestrained and unpredictable.” See also, Tornado. Normally, a cold front’s collision with warm humid air results in beneficial rain. When meteorologists predict too much of both coupled with dramatic drops in temperature they warn of ‘severe weather’ and possible tornados. But weather experts […]
Reining in Billboards
GUEST COMMENTARY Reining in billboards across Missouri would preserve state’s beauty Paul Lore Published The Missourian (Columbia) Apr 16, 2025 We suffer the blight of the ubiquitous billboards that line our highways as a cost of living in a competitive world. But we now suffer “a death by a thousand cuts” from their proliferation. Indeed, […]
Nothing like Springtime in the Ozarks when blooming redbuds and flowering dogwoods spring to life in the shadow of a rugged forest of cedar, hickory and oak. The ornamentals’ larger hardwood kin follow thereafter, their leafy sprouts sporting varying hues of virgin green. April rains quench Spring’s voracious thirst required to sustain renewed […]
A Plea to Lee Enterprises
He who wins the race to the bottom loses. In the St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s race to cut costs—and the newspaper’s size and breadth—the Post, its dwindling readership, and the St. Louis area lose. The Post-Dispatch’s Sunday issue has eroded to a modicum compared to when the Sunday paper was a three-inch slab of print. Back […]
Return of Prodigal Winter
Mother Nature’s polar express blew into St. Louis bringing with it the return of Old Man Winter’s Prodigal Son. A nine-inch drop of snow and sleet elicited cries of anguish from naysayers as they shivered and shoveled the winter mix from their driveways and scraped clear their car windshields. Conversely, the young and the young […]
Myopic Destiny
Missouri officials announced plans to sell two Missouri state office buildings located in downtown St. Louis—including the historic Wainwright Building—and to move many of the effected 600 state employees to Chesterfield. The ostensible reason for the move was explained as ‘primarily financial’. However, the underlying motivation for the move appears vindictive at worst, narrow-minded at […]
Moon Shadows
“When the moon hits your eye, like a big pizza pie, that’s amore.” Two local yokels witness the full moon rising. The one asks: “What’s closer, the moon or Florida?” The other replies: “Duh. Can you see Florida?” “That lunatic just cut me off!” We make jokes and sing of love in conjunction with the […]
Eclipse Sensation
A full eclipse differs dramatically from a partial eclipse, the difference being literally night and day. Even at 98% coverage, the sun still pours out enormous candle power. Then suddenly, the moon covers the whole of the sun, and darkness descends like a flip of the switch. The witnessing throng lets out a collective gasp […]
Missing Indian Winter
March Lamb chased off March Lion. This atypical weather comes on the heels of a February knockdown of Old Man Winter, which forebodes an extended summer that drains denizens, withers crops, and ebbs rivers. The absence of capricious March’s hot and cold weather rouses consciousness of a warming globe—man made or not. Alas, where art […]