Opinions
This Pride Month, Recognize the Importance of Supporting LGBTQ Mental Health
Envision:You surveyed nearly 600 LGBTQ+ residents about their health concerns and experiences, and the findings were staggering.
Letter to the Editor: Urging Colorado Lawmakers to Protect Small Businesses by Amending APRA
In today’s digital era, small businesses, including mine, use social media as a critical tool to stay connected and relevant to our customers. With platforms boasting billions of users, social media serves as an invaluable resource for small businesses to expand our reach amidst competition. My work as a health and fitness coach, both online and in person, use social media as an essential resource that can provide accurate and authentic information to current clients and “would-be” clients.
DAVIS: What I Learned While Being Kicked Out of a Christian Nationalist Event
I arrived at Radiance Church in Commerce City shortly before noon on Tuesday and took up a parking space in the thin band of midday shade cast by the trees at the small parking lot’s far edge. I was nervous in a way I had not expected to be. I have handled plenty of hostile interviews as a reporter, and even enjoyed them from time to time, but this was different.
Exaggerations, Half-Truths, and Lies: How CO GOP Leader Williams Wraps Bigotry in Faux-Religious Rhetoric
Williams' fearmongering follows the legacy of the Colorado Ku Klux Klan before him.
Biden Can’t Fix Our Immigration System By Banning Asylum
Shutting down the border to asylum seekers is cruel, ineffective, and plainly illegal. We need to put human dignity — and the law — first.
DEGUIRE: The Dark Money Funding a Candidate for Colorado’s State Board of Education
The candidate, backed by Jared Polis, has been boosted by over half a million dollars of dark money.
DAVIS: Chekhov’s Gun, Christian Nationalism and the Supreme Court
If you say in the first act that there is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the third act it absolutely must go off,” reads one of the many versions of the narrative principle commonly known as “Chekhov’s gun”. Developed by 19th-century Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov, Chekhov’s gun was the playwright’s way of insisting that every element in a story must ultimately be necessary; that there can be no insignificant details, and, therefore, that every detail carries a sense of imminence with it. Through my years of studying, analyzing, and working in politics, I have come to believe that a similar principle applies in real life: the details, often unnoticed at the time of their emergence, have a way of coming back and turning the plot like Chekhov’s gun.