A suspended instructor was right, but for the wrong reasons, when he acknowledged the privilege to teach ‘future dead cops.’
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Turning Out The Lights In A Power Town
The Montana town of Colstrip was built to turn coal into electricity. What happens when the mines and power plants shut down?
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Remembering History By Forgetting It
Some residents of a Florida city founded 60 years after Appomattox have a fuzzy memory of their community’s Southern history.
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Giving After Disaster Strikes
Natural disasters can make humans feel powerless. The impulse to help in their wake is both natural and admirable. But while there is no such thing as “bad generosity,” some gifts are more valuable than others.
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On The Road After Irma
A circuitous route home provided views of Irma’s aftermath from multiple vantage points.
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Scanning For Equifax Fallout
The Equifax hack probably spells the eventual end of Social Security numbers as a form of personal identification.
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Eric Meermann in Consumer Reports
Eric Meermann weighs in on borrowing from your retirement accounts after a natural disaster.
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New Accounting Reveals Another Empty Promise
Besides unfunded pension promises, states and cities are making empty health care promises too.
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