December 14, 2025

Opinion


Let’s Change Trashy Traditions

Guest Opinion
By Cathye Williams | Dec. 13, 2025

From the last Thursday in November until the ball drops in Times Square, it’s estimated that we Americans create 25 percent more waste than normal—approximately 25 million more tons of garbage. It comes from consumer goods, gift packaging/shipping, food scraps (including over 300 million pounds of Thanksgiving turkey scraps alone), and extra electricity use for all those pretty lights. In short, we give and get too many things that no one needs … Read More >>


Of Airports and Gravel

Spectator
By Stephen Tuttle | Dec. 13, 2025

No doubt the entire Grand Traverse region is popular with visitors and prospective new residents. Additionally, people already here travel more, and some now telework from home but have to zoom off to meetings someplace other than their home office. The result is our little airport just keeps getting busier and busier. Founded in 1929 as Ransom Field on what is now mostly Memorial Gardens off South Airport Road, it moved to … Read More >>


What? I Didn’t Catch That

Guest Opinion
By Richard Fidler | Dec. 13, 2025

“I left the clothes in the dryer.” … “What?” “I said I left the clothes in the dryer.” … “What’s on the dryer?” (Raised voice) “I said I left the clothes in the dryer.” … Silence. “Forget it.” Dialogues like that are common in households with hearing-impaired housemates. I should know: I am hearing-impaired. My impairment is quite severe. I have bilateral Meniere’s Disease, a condition characterized by balance issues, tinnitus, and … Read More >>


Pardon Me

Spectator
By Stephen Tuttle | Dec. 6, 2025

A president’s constitutional power to offer clemency to prisoners, or soon-to-be prisoners, by way of pardon or commutation for federal crimes is absolute with the exception of impeachment. A pardon totally erases a conviction and immediately ends penalties associated with it and clears a person’s record of the offense or offenses. A commutation shortens a sentence but leaves the conviction intact. That power is sometimes suspiciously used. George H. W. Bush used … Read More >>


Housing Zoning Atlas & Community Planning

Guest Opinion
By Yarrow Brown | Dec. 6, 2025

There is so much to celebrate in our region and across Michigan. We’ve made real progress in expanding housing options and acknowledging housing as an essential part of community well-being. Yet the urgency is unmistakable: we must work together to ensure every resident of northwest Michigan has a safe, healthy place to call home. With looming federal and state funding cuts to supportive and deeply affordable housing, the task ahead is significant—but … Read More >>


Teen Apathy in the Political World

Guest Opinion
By Tess Tarchak-Hiss | Nov. 29, 2025

In my third-grade classroom, Donald Trump won the 2016 election. Tension was high in Mrs. Maxbaur’s class; girls galloped across the playground on their imaginary horses, gathering info on everyone to see who would vote for whom. On my made-up mare, I investigated that 14 kids would be voting for Clinton and 14 would be voting for Trump. Well. Shoot. By the time we ripped off our snowpants and muddled into the … Read More >>


Not Quite Peacemaking

Spectator
By Stephen Tuttle | Nov. 29, 2025

Our president continues to insist he is deserving of some sort of peace prize and claims he’s stopped eight wars in his 11 months in office. Now might be a good time to check up on all of that as we enter the season celebrating the actual Prince of Peace. Let’s start with the plan for “peace” in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Or, as President Trump calls it, “Ukraine’s war with … Read More >>


Thankful for Much

Spectator
By Stephen Tuttle | Nov. 22, 2025

For many of us, Thanksgiving is the best of holidays. No gifts are required, there is good food and good company available in abundance, and distant relatives, long-forgotten friends, and stragglers with no other place to go can all find a welcoming place at the table. Lively conversation will surely follow, though some might want to avoid any and all things political. Despite overt philosophical hostilities and a barely functional government, we … Read More >>


Elected Officials Must Stand Up for Michiganders

Guest Opinion
By Denzel McCampbell | Nov. 22, 2025

As we say goodbye to one election season and get fully thrown into another that will elect the entire Michigan state government, U.S. House representatives, and a U.S. Senator, it’s important to take a step back and remind ourselves and our elected officials why we go to the ballot box to make our voices heard. For most of us, every three out of four years, the first Tuesday in November will be … Read More >>


Warmer, Wetter and Windier

Spectator
By Stephen Tuttle | Nov. 15, 2025

Bill Gates has almost given up on the idea that we can slow down, much less stop, climate change. He thinks we should pivot our thinking to how best we can deal with the inevitable climate and weather changes headed our way. He isn’t alone in his pessimism, as homeowners in several states will soon learn. For example, State Farm insurance will no longer write homeowner insurance policies in California. Existing policies … Read More >>

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