Las Vegas Sun

May 18, 2024

Opinion

Editorials »

Everyday Americans would benefit from streamlined, reformed tax code
This year, the Internal Revenue Service piloted a program in Nevada and 11 other states to help Americans file their taxes in a simpler and more affordable way. Direct File lets taxpayers with W-2 and Social Security income, and the most common credits and deductions, file their taxes directly with the IRS for free and without the assistance of commercial preparation service.
Show gratitude for Mother’s Day with your presence as much as your presents
A convergence of cultural holidays has given rise to a full Mother’s Day weekend this year, rather than just a single Mother’s Day. The United States celebrates Mother’s Day on the second Sunday of May ...

Columnists »

Where I Stand »

Letters to the Editor

Please send letters to the editor to [email protected]. Letters to the editor should be no more than 250 words, cite the sources of any figures or other data, and include the writer’s name, address and telephone number. Anonymous letters will not be published. The Sun reserves the right to edit letters for clarity and length.

GOP takes aim at cancer patients
In March, House Republicans passed a budget to avoid a government shutdown and in their infinite wisdom, eliminated every penny for cancer research for which the Obama-Biden administration created a seven-year program to serve.
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Ken Kolman, Henderson
Trump calls himself guilty
As president, Donald Trump said that if a defendanthad nothing to hide and was not guilty, he or she should not hide behind the Fifth Amendment.
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Jason Brent, Las Vegas
Conservation gets big wins
Across the West, beautiful natural landscapes and thriving wildlife populations are cherished parts of what make us love to call this region home. Nevada’s vast expanses of sagebrush and winding red rock canyons make this especially true. A healthy environment supports local economies and promotes our quality of life.
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Jennifer Inaba, Las Vegas
Replace biased judge in trial
Judge Aileen Cannon’s decision to indefinitely postpone Donal Trump’s trial for stealing and mishandling government secrets is an attack on justice.
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By Bruce Joffe, Piedmont, Calif.
Make diversity a real priority
Black History Month, Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Hispanic Heritage Month, etc., all sound like good ideas in principal.
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By Richard Reyes, Las Vegas
Lakes can’t keep up with growth
In preindustrial times, climate historians indicate multiple civilizations faced arid cycles lasting over 100 years.
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By Mark Bird, Las Vegas
Grand juries are easily persuaded
When you read the makeup of a grand jury, there’s a glaring fact that cannot be ignored. While the makeup is mixed, the absence of the defendant, his legal representation ...
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By Gary Rosenfeld, Tampa, Fla.
Presidents’ track records are clear
The pivotal question in this election boils down to which presidency was and will be more beneficial for our nation, Donald Trump’s or Joe Biden’s? The answer is crystal clear ...
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By Gary Lewey, Las Vegas
Love forces hard choices on us
I served as the caregiver and legal guardian for four years for my mom, who became blind with full-blown dementia, and my dad who had Parkinson’s disease and out-of-control diabetes ...
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By Paul Gary, Las Vegas
Don’t let Trump set the narrative
Former President Donald Trump demonizes undocumented immigrants and promises to deport millions if he is reelected. He plans to build detention camps and to use the U.S. military.
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By Terry Hansen, Milwaukee

Other Voices »

  • When party loyalty trumps ‘moral’ responsibility
    Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell called Donald Trump “practically and morally responsible for provoking” the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection.
  • For their sacrifice, US military heroes deserve sanctuary as well as gratitude
    Today is Armed Forces Day, and all Americans, regardless of their political affiliations, should consider ways to express our profound gratitude to the men and women who have donned the uniform and selflessly served our nation. We must unite as a nation to honor the sacrifices made by our military members and their families, and reaffirm our commitment to supporting them in every way possible.
  • Policy on trans athletes not that hard of a call
    The National Collegiate Athletic Association is under pressure to draft an impossible piece of policy: a stance on transgender athletes that makes progressives and conservatives happy. The best it’s come up with so far is to say late last month that its rules are “under review,” after a smaller student-athlete association effectively banned trans women from competing in women’s sports.
  • Fulfilling the promise of landmark education ruling is up to all of us
    Seventy years ago today, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down the landmark ruling that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional.
  • Black cultural greats helped nation realize folly of segregation
    Today’s 70th anniversary of the Supreme Court’s epoch-making Brown v. Board of Education ruling reminds us that the route to social change never is a straight line.
  • Vouchers are not the ‘civil rights issue of our time’
    In 1958, three years after the Brown v. Board of Education order to integrate American schools, the Texas Legislature debated a plan that would offer vouchers to parents who opposed the idea that their children would learn in diverse racial settings.
  • Show gratitude to veterans by fighting homelessness
    As we recognize those who serve our nation during Military Appreciation Month, we must also focus on a longstanding issue demanding urgent action: the scourge of veteran homelessness ...
  • Elder fraud case is as tragic as it is infuriating
    A 75-year-old man named Robert McClanahan knocks on the front door of Eddy Blizzard’s house in Maryland, desperate to know what happened to all his money ...
  • Financial literacy can help the most anxious generation
    U.S. teens are perhaps the most anxious generation ever — with one-third diagnosed with an anxiety condition, according to the National Institutes of Health ...
  • An apple a day keeps the doctor away’ is a lie
    Managing decline is time-consuming. Medicare patients 65 and older (I’m 70, but not using Medicare yet) have roughly 20 visits each year to a doctor’s office or medical facility, and that doesn’t include dental care, according to ...
  • The biggest story last week was not Stormy Daniels or campus protests
    While TV news was glued last week to Stormy Daniels’ tell-all testimony and pro-Palestinian demonstrations, scant attention was paid to Vladimir Putin’s tsar-like coronation for a fifth term. Nor to his bellicose parade of Russia’s nuclear-capable missiles through ...
  • Invest in clinicians to solve mental health care crisis
    The need for mental healthcare services in Nevada has never been greater than it is now. This trend is reflected across the nation, but a detrimental lack of access to services puts Nevada into a particularly difficult position.
  • A porn star earns her place in US history
    Last week, after Stormy Daniels spent nearly eight hours over two days testifying in former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial in New York, the time seemed right to crack open her memoir, “Full Disclosure.”
  • Fears about ‘Ozempic babies’ show lack in women’s health care
    The historic failure of medical research to acknowledge that women’s bodies differ from men’s has a new catchphrase: Ozempic babies. According to recent reports, all of them anecdotal and many of them on TikTok, off-label use of diabetes drugs including ...
  • College protests recall ’70s arrests at Stanford
    I was almost arrested. OK, that’s a stretch, I confess. I was in the room, inside the Old Union at Stanford University on the afternoon of May 9, 1977.